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    September 11

    Curriculum Night!

    Steve and I went to Curriculum  Night last night. This is an opportunity for the principal to talk to us about his three-legged stool partnership: we all must work together to educate and raise our children. For school to be successful, children need us, their teachers and staff, and themselves, all working together to uphold the Peace Builder values of the school.
     
    Many people skipped that part.
     
    The way more interesting part was going to Ben's classroom and listening to his teacher, Mrs. McPerren, showing us what the kids will be learning this year. From memory:
    • Chess! The kids will all start learning to play chess. Chess will teach the kids skills like strategic planning and problem solving. Kids will have tournaments later in the year with the other 2nd graders and the 3rd graders.
    • Science: balancing things, something in the middle, and insects. The kids will grow butterflies and other insects this spring.
    • Reading: kids will be broken up into smaller groups based on their skills both in phonics and comprehension/fluency.
    • Math: our school district is in flux as the district will be adopting a new math curriculum next year. This year will be a mish-mash of the old and the new and supplemental materials as the teachers get the kids up-to-date on anything they are currently missing before moving to the new program next year. They'll be concentrating on adding/subtracting double-digit numbers and place values among other things.
    • Social Studies: the school has a new social studies program that they're tyring out on our kids this year. Teachers seem excited about it. Steve liked the text book.
    • Writing: the kids will practice writing narratives, both fiction and "fact" (or non-fiction).

    Oh, and one other interesting thing: no one knows what to do about handwriting. How valuable is it? Both in neatness and cursive writing. Most adults go to a computer when they have to write anything much longer than a paragraph. The school and district will be doing some research to come up with something.

    I'm sure there was more and if I discover anything really interesting, I'll post it here.

    In the meantime, a Ben moment.

    Our playground ends at a big tall hill. The kids run up the hill and play up on the top of it. Just barely out of earshot and out of sight if they go in the woods, which they are not supposed to do. Ben and his friend Alex came running down from the hill covered in reddish streaks: on their faces, their hands and arms, everywhere. Turns out the kids found some blackberry brambles (I know, you can't throw a stick out here without it getting tangled in blackberry brambles). They had snack, and then wrote on themselves with the juice and then painted sticks so that it would look like blood.

    I just shake my head and say, "Boys."

    September 10

    Ben needs me.

    That's right. Ben needs his Mama.
     
    Yesterday, I dropped him off at school at 9:00. Didn't see him again until 6:15. His friend, Mrs. M, picked him up from school, took him home with her son and daughter. She gave them snack. She drove three boys and her daughter to a birthday party. Then took four boys (or half the team) and her daughter from the birthday party to soccer practice. She made sure all four of those boys changed into shorts, put on their shinguards, socks, and cleats, and had fresh water. Then she brought three boys (and her daughter) home.
     
    I say, God bless friends like Mrs. M.
     
    Ben says, "I never spent any time with you today and I didn't like it."
     
    Then he sat on me. For an hour. OK, OK, maybe only 10 minutes but when a boy who weighs 70 pounds sits on your thigh with his bony butt, it feels like an hour.
     
    And I'm not even exaggerating about the 70 pounds part.

    One Sad Languishing Blog Needs Attention

    Anyone want to take over?
     
    About a month ago, Grandmd and Grandpa visited. They left, as they must, but not before Ben broke down and cried like a... well... like a baby because he was afraid it would be a whole nother year before he saw his grandparents again. I don't know how that happened but we clearly must make sure it doesn't happen again. G-parents must be in Ben's life much more often.
     
    That same month I heard from MANY people who all missed this blog and Ben's stories. I heard from 2 babysitters, 2 aunties, 2 grandparents, and 1 husband. Yeah, that's right, even Ben's dad, who lives with him, pointed out a few incidents in our lives that were "blog-worthy."
     
    So, take two (or three or four) on providing stories of silliness, sarcasm, and survival.
     
    Stay tuned....
    October 20

    410

    Ben, at breakfast:
     
    I counted to 410 today. I woke up at 6:08 so I just started counting. In first grade we have to be able to count to 100 but I can count to 410. I can probably even count to 500. JJ can count to 600. I bet I can count to 600. I'm going to count to 600 next time...
     
    This is, of course, why Steve and I need an espresso maker at home. I can't get to the Starbucks early enough to be awake enough for conversations like this...
    August 18

    Mama needs a new pair of shoes...

    As told to Mama by Kristen.

    BEN: My Papa works too much.

    KRISTEN: Why do you think he works so much?

    BEN: So he can put money on Mama's credit card.

    Ben doesn't want to be an astronaut

    In the car today

    BEN: I don't want to be an astronaut anymore.

    MAMA: Why not?

    BEN: 'Cause then I wouldn't be able to see my kids ever.

    We talked for more on this: Ben has decided he would rather work for a company like Microsoft like his Papa so he can come home almost every night to see his kids.

    Ben is SIX and we celebrated!

    Ben wanted an astronaut/space/NASA party. I wanted a party at home. We figured out how to make both happen.

    First, the invitation:

    clip_image001Mission Control Specialist Serdy

    Astronaut Trainee Guest

    Dear Astronaut Trainee:

    BLAST OFF! Commander Ben Serdy has a special mission and needs more astronauts. You have been selected to be part of the Launch Crew for a mission to Outer Space!

    Mission Objective: Help Commander Ben Serdy have a Happy Birthday!

    Astronauts report for duty Friday August 15, 2008.

    Countdown begins at 1100 hours (11:00 AM start time).

    Return to Earth at 1330 hours (1:30 PM end time).

    Launch Site: Space Station Serdy.

    Coordinates: [our address]

    Communicate with Specialist Valerie Serdy at Mission Control to confirm your flight readiness.

    Be prepared to train for your new position and enjoy snack, drinks, and cake!

    Next: the decorations:

    • I drilled holes in plastic glow-in-the-dark stars and strung them together with fishing line. Kristen hung them along the stairway to the basement
    • I strung black and blue balloons (that Kristen blew up!) on fishing line. We hung them along the deck railing along with blue and silver stars

    Next: the day of the party

    Once all the astronaut trainees arrived, we sat them down to get a preview of what they were training for: they watched the lift-off scene in Apollo 13.

    Then, we started our training be exercising to make our bodies strong for space. We passed out jump ropes, demonstrated how to jump and let the kids go. There was much whining: most of the kids didn't know how to jump rope and it was HOT HOT HOT the day of the party. Eventually everyone tried to jump and most kids got the hang of it enough to skip three or four or five times.

    Then, we moved on to the bear crawl and the crab walk. Everyone hated the crab walk! They kept falling and the grass was really wet so we switched to bear crawl races.

    After we wore the kids out (just a teeny bit) we had some astronaut snacks: freeze-dried apples, freeze-dried potatoes (they all LOVED these), and freeze-dried ice cream sandwich. Again, much love for the ice cream sandwich.

    We did the string game next. Earlier in the day I tied little parachute dudes to string and wrapped the string round and round the living room. Each astronaut had to navigate the string maze to rescue their parachute guy. Mostly the kids got frustrated with the maze so we had to help them rescue their parachute men. Then they took turns dropping them off the balcony. Kristen came in with a request for a new game so we switched to the Asteroid Game. Each kid got a balloon-asteroid and had to keep the asteroid from hitting the earth. If the asteroids hit the earth, the kids all had to "become extinct" just like the dinosaurs.

    Lunch next: pizza and apples. Then craft: each kid got to decorate a Pringles can I had already spray-painted white. Then it was off to the moon-rock hunt (treasures wrapped in foil). The kids ran around the yard searching for the moon rocks Kristen hid. (By the way, somehow amidst all this help, Kristen took some fantastic shots of the party!)

    Cake, ice cream, and present opening followed.

    Finally, the kids all shot off rockets (stomp-rockets, not the kind with any kind of ignition sequence) while waiting for their parents to pick them up.

    No one wanted to leave and there was much giggling in between mild bouts of frustration. No one cried so all in all it was a fantastic party!

    Ben never EVER sleeps, part 2

    Sometimes, Ben gets up after bedtime to brush his teeth with his new High School Musical tooth brush that plays music for two minutes just to see if he can figure out how to get it to work.

    K. Tourtillotte, Babysitter Extraordinare

    It has taken us a long time to find a babysitter we love as much as our previous Babysitter Extraordinare but the wait was worth it. But Kristen is not only a fabulous babysitter, she is also an up-and-coming artistic Photographer Extraordinaire also. She took photos of Ben's birthday party. Want to see some samples along with some of Kristen's other work?

    Visit: http://www.ktourtillottephotography.blogspot.com/

    Then send Kristen e-mail if you'd like to have some unique photos taken of your family!

    August 11

    Ben never EVER sleeps

    Because he has the body of a 60-year old man...

    He gets in bed and his back hurts. So he gets up and reads a book.

    He has to pee.

    His feet hurt.

    He has to get a drink of water.

    He has to look at the moon.

    Scout comes into his room twice at night to check up on him. But don't close his door so Scout can't do it.

    Mason is still up and eating ice cream. Ben is spying on them.

    He has growing pains.

    He has growing pains again.

    He's too cold.

    He's too hot.

    His blanket is too heavy but if you take it off, he gets too cold.

    He can't find the right stuffed animal to sleep with (but he swears to me that he doesn't sleep with animals anymore).

    I am so ready to install a webcam in his room to spy on him...

    Ben is smart

    BEN:

    I have a really big brain.

    'Cause I remembered where my eye doctor was from a whole year ago.

    --Said to Papa the day Ben had to give me directions to his eye doctor for his annual checkup.

    His eyes are fine, by the way. Other than the red/green color deficiency.

    Pallino's is too slow

    BEN:

    I wish McDonalds was as slow as Pallino's and Pallino's was as fast as McDonalds.

    If a fairy gave me one wish I would totally wish that wish.

    Our poor, mangled cat

    CIMG2020 smaller Scout the cat had surgery Friday.

    They mangled him.

    Scout has had a lump about the size of my little finger nail under his skin for a little while now. The vet inspected it and said it was either a mass cell or melanoma. Either way, it was some kind of cancer and had to be removed. In most cases, removing the lump is enough: no spreading, no more medicines, nothing. However, the lump does have to be removed because it can spread or release chemicals in the cat's bloodstream that makes him ill (vomiting. We're really just in this to save our carpets...).

    So, we dropped Scout off Friday expecting a teeny lump to be removed. He came back with half his back shaved. Scout is technically a "medium haired domestic" cat. I am afraid what a long haired cat looks like. His hair is 2 to 2 1/2 inches long. Scout came back cold.

    CIMG2022 smaller Scout came back with three incisions rather than just one. Scout came back with 16 stitches: the middle incision has 10 all by itself. He is now wearing a cone that is connected to his head by an ace bandage (Scout has never worn a collar).

    He also came back with a morphine-based pain medicine.

    Scout is very unhappy. His head seems to be constantly itchy. He begs for us to scratch his head over and over and over again. Scout is frustrated that he can't head-butt us. He now just mashes his cone head-on into us when he wants attention. Today, we leaned his cone against my face. Leaned. A lot. I didn't like having a face full of vet-smelly plastic stuck to my face but I pet the booger-boy anyway.

    It's become a full-time job taking care of this cat: scratching his head, rubbing underneath the ace bandage, holding him down without touching his stitches to give him his medicine, moving his cone out of his way when he gets it stuck in the couch cushions...

    He's also not supposed to climb stairs (our house has three floors), jump on anything (we have beds, couches, cat scratching posts), or scratch at his stitches. Except for the scratching, we've ignored everything else.

    Scout will be a cone head until at least Friday, Aug 22.

    After that, we'll get to watch the patch of hair the shape and approximate size of Utah grow back. Last time Scout had hair shaved, it all grew back gray. His backside could start looking pretty funny once it stops looking pretty gnarly...

    Blue Angels, Thanks to Alison

    CIMG1863 colored sized Our diving friend Alison has a boat. She likes to water ski (when she isn't parasailing, scuba diving, delivering babies, walking a dog that weighs more than her... it's possible our friend has ADHD). Last summer, Alison invited us to go on the lake with her to watch the Blue Angels practice.

    This year, we were able to take her up on it.

    For those of you who don't live in Seattle, the Blue Angels perform an air show every year during Seafair. They practice Thursday and Friday over Lake Washington, closing the I-90 bridge, and perform Saturday and Sunday. There are plenty of viewing spots at parks all around Lake Washington, but I'm pretty convinced the best spot is right on the water.

    CIMG1855 colored sized Alison invited Ben and I and graciously allowed (encouraged!) Ben  to invite a friend. He chose a friend from school, Sean, and Sean's parents trusted me enough to let us take their youngest on a stranger's boat.

    We had some nervousness but once on the boat, the boys had a blast. They both knelt on the back seat to turn around and watch where we'd been. We had a picnic on the water, saw the big set of dinosaur bones ensconced in someone's living room, and watched the Blue Angels practice.

    CIMG1880 colored sized At first, the planes were too loud and both boys winced and complained. Sean wrapped the neck of his life vest around his ears. So, I pulled out the massive ear protectors Steve uses in his wood shop and passed them out. The boys looked like big dorks but they seriously enjoyed the show.

    CIMG1888 colored sized At one point, the local Coast Guard stopped by and asked if we wanted free ice cream. Even with the headphones on the boys heard that! Alison's boat, being a water ski boat, is very low to the water. The CG boat slowly inched towards us until the prow, and anchor, floated gently right above my head.  The CG guy had to practically lay down over the prow to reach down to us to hand us the free coupons for Dairy Queen ice cream. Turns out our boys were wearing their life vests correctly and the CG rewarded them for that!

     

    CIMG1899 colored sized The practice session slowed way down as the Angels did whatever it was they did. Ben got bored and raced from the front of the boat to the back depending on whether Alison was moving the boat or not. Sean fell asleep. Seriously. Face first on the soft couches in the front of the bus. Ben had to hop over him to find a space in the front to watch.

    We finally left, got gas, and headed for home. The boys kept yelling at Alison to go faster! Faster! So she did. With both boys right up front, they really felt the speed and laughed and laughed and laughed. Right up until Sean's hat flew off.

    Alison slowed the boat way down to try to find the hat but right as she slowed the boat a wave came over the front, soaking Ben. Both boys ended up wrapped in towels sitting on my lap near tears: Sean for his missing hat, Ben for his soaked clothes.

    And another outing successfully ended!

    Thanks, Miss Alison! We all had a great time!

    June 30

    Movie Previews

    This weekend we watched Wall-E. We sat thru lots and LOTS of previews. Ben quickly got the hang of previews.
    Space Chimps, coming out this summer.
    BEN: I don't want to see that.
     
    Beverly Hills Chihuahua (I swear I am not making that up), coming this fall.
    BEN: I want to see that. The dogs are singing!
     
    Some other movie, coming this fall.
    BEN: I don't think I want to see that one.
     
    Some other movie (there were a lot of previews), coming this Christmas.
    BEN: I DON'T want to see that one!! I don't want to miss Christmas!!
    June 29

    Morality thru Star Wars

    BEN: Whenever anyone says they're going to tell one me, I just say, "It's not me!"

    MAMA: Um, OK. But if you DID do something wrong that someone wanted to tell about, you shouldn't like, you should just say you're sorry.

    BEN: Yeah, but I just say I didn't do it!

    MAMA: OK, but if you DID do it and you say you didn't, then it's a lie.

    BEN: Well if I did it then I say sorry and sometimes I have to say it two or three times.

    MAMA: OK, well sometimes you have to say sorry a few times because the other kid didn't hear it or you didn't say it nicely enough. But back to the lie thing. [and here is where Mama made a calculated attempt to manipulate her son and may have made a tactical error...] When you lie, you're on the path to the Dark Side.

    BEN: But, but, but... if I say like 10 lies I'll be on the Dark Side? If I tell 20 lies, I'll be on the Dark Side?

    MAMA: Um... [crap, crap, crap] I don't know how many lies, but you shouldn't say ANY lies. If you say even one lie you're on the path to the Dark Side. So you shouldn't ever lie, OK?

    BEN: OK. But I've only ever told one lie. I've only ever told one lie, that's all!

    MAMA: It's OK, Ben! [yes, now Mama is back-pedaling from the fear of the Dark Side she has implanted deeply into Ben's psyche...] It's OK. Just, uh, don't tell any more lies and you'll be OK.

    June 10

    Six Blue Rings

    We have quite the Nerf arsenal around the house now. We have one large sniper rifle, one semi-automatic 6-shooter, 2 single-shot pistols, and I think one more. We also have several different kinds of darts: orange with blue sticky suction cup tops; black darts with blue sticky suction cup tops; slim-line orange darts with orange rubber tips; and slim-line black darts with orange tips that have teeny holes cut into them so the dart whistles like a bottle rocket when it zooms past your left ear.
    This seems to happen quite a lot around our house. The shooters range from Steve to Ben to any number of Ben's friends.
    With this many guns around, you'd think ammo would be equally available. Well, the fine makers of Nerf have designed their weaponry such that the darts are not all interchangeable. The Longshot sniper rifle will only work with the Longshot slim-line orange darts with the orange rubber tip. The 6-shooter semi-automatic will only shoot the orange darts with the blue sticky suction cup tips. Only one gut will shoot the bottle-rocket darts.
    And the darts are not easy to find. The Longshot dart refill packs regularly sell out at the Hasbro site where they are cheap. (Read $5 instead of $15 on Amazon.)
    So, we often find ourselves on a big ole dart hunt pushing up cushions, tossing aside blankets, digging under the couch, to find darts.
    And, when darts break, as the sometimes do, we set them aside on the offchance I'll go pick up my glue gun and hot glue the tips back to the styrofoam darts.
    We have a collection of 6 blue sticky suction cup tops on the wide white wood bannister surrounding our stairs. At some point, someone stuck them all to the wood in a rather creative pattern forming a very nice hexagon.
    And there they stayed.
    I don't know for how long.
    But now, that we've finally moved the blue sticky suction cup tops to the basement where my glue gun is, we are left with a wonderul reminder of their previous position.
    Six blue rings.
    The blue from the darts bled onto the white wood of our bannister and left six blue rings. Very evenly spaced rings with uniform thicknesses. Quite the work of art, really.
    Except that I CAN'T GET RID OF THEM!!
    Tried Simple Green. Tried Windex. These were the two closest all-purpose cleaners I had. Neither worked. Tried spit, even. No luck.
    So, now, everytime I walk upstairs I see them.
    Six blue rings.
    Quite a vivid color. Lovely really.
    If they weren't on my bannister.
    June 05

    All I wanted was a puffer-fish cake...

    Sometimes life doesn't go according to plan.

    Tuesday, June 3rd. Steve's Birthday.

    Planned Agenda

    • Drop Ben off at school
    • Go to grocery store. Get ingredients for dinner and cake
    • Lunch with Ben after school
    • Go to Fred Meyer to get Steve's birthday present
    • Clean kitchen
    • Clean family room
    • Make bed (Steve likes a clean house)
    • Make cake
    • Make dinner
    • Celebrate Steve's birthday!

    Actual Progression of Events

    • read e-mail about pond construction on nearby street. Quickly dash off e-mail once again requesting 5-foot buffer between edge of street and start of ponds, per King County requirement
    • Read e-mail about bear and cub spotted in nearby backyard. Discuss bear safety (and subsequently reassure a scared Ben)
    • Drop Ben off at school
    • Discuss with other parents whether Ben saw the Swiss Army knife a fellow kindergartner brought in and if it bothered him at all.
    • Go to bank. Open a new savings account for Steve's new underwater camera. Spend a LONG time discussing options (savings accounts aren't nearly as simple as I remember when I grew up). Sign six separate sheets of paper, pocket yet another packet of checks, and walk, in the pouring rain, from the bank to the grocery store
    • Grocery store: discuss a little more about the knife with a fellow parent also getting her shopping in without her kids
    • Get cake ingredients.
    • Forget dinner ingredients. Backtrack to get those.
    • Forget corn. Backtrack to get that (we ended up borrowing corn from a very lovely neighbor. I wanted to pay her back. Altho, I think the corn is still in my freezer...)
    • Couldn't find Strawberry cake as requested; spend time on Betty Crocker site for options. Settle on banana cake; after all, we have bananas and I don't want to go back to the store...
    • Meet Ben at the bus stop. He announces he wants to go the Lego store to get a present for Papa
    • Receive call from friend who wants to borrow my kick-boxing gloves for a mutual friend and can I please drop them off at a third friend's house?
    • Wander all three floors in house looking for gloves. Find them in the third place I look; a perfectly obvious place had I thought about it.
    • Make lunch; eat lunch; pile dishes up on counter
    • pile into car; drive to third friend's house to drop off gloves.
    • Drive to camera store on way to mall
    • pick out polarization filter for Steve's camera. drive to mall
    • circle parking lot five times to find a space. listen to Ben point out which levels are full
    • use directory to find Lego store
    • stand in front of taped off hole where tug boat playground used to be
    • wander Lego store to pick out Star Wars Legos for Steve, say No to Ben when he asks for Indiana Jones and SpeedRacer Legos.
    • directory to find game store
    • stop and play at ferry playground. Meant for definitely smaller kids than Ben, tho not necessarily younger
    • Game store for Lego Indiana Jones. Listen to kid behind counter tell me I should pre-order Lego Bat Man so I'm not picking up one of the last copies like I am with Lego Indy. Ignore him. After all, I got Lego Indy on the release date. I'm not worried about Lego Bat Man
    • Back to the ferry
    • Back home
    • Read e-mail while Ben looks for friend to play with. Discover Ben has been exposed to Fifth's Disease which is not dangerous unless you're in your first trimester. Think over all people we've been near the past week and forward to my one pregnant friend
    • while I'm at it, forward Bear e-mail to folks who live nearby and could benefit from bear safety refresher course
    • Clean kitchen. What a job. Leave dishwasher open for future dirty dishes
    • Open cabinet door where cake plate is located. Scream and plant feet firmly in place when blender jar comes crashing down (only a foot) and shatters. all over the floor and into the dishwasher.
    • Freeze while brain goes into stream-of-consciousness overdrive: my blender jar broke. good thing Ben's at a friend's. My blender's pretty much useless now. Wonder how much a new blender costs? Wonder if I can get a new blender jar? My blender is about 14 years old now. Do they even make parts for it? And do I even need a blender? Well, yes, 'cause I make smoothies. Would it just be easier to buy a new blender? But we're on a budget and it would be just wasteful considering the motor is perfectly good. Oh, but maybe I can get a new blender jar but what if it's only plastic? A friend from high school/college complained once he could only get a plastic blender jar which is completely useless when home-brewing illegal mind-altering drugs but if I got a plastic jar then I would be staring a giant shards and teeny bits of glass all over. Right. Must deal with broken glass.
    • Deep breath. Carefully move bare feet out of blast zone and search for broom. Find it in third place I look.
    • Carefully pick up giant pieces and place in shopping bag. Sweep up shards. Sweep out dishwasher. Dither about whether glass shards can be recycled. Finally decide to throw them away.
    • Cut out shapes for fins and mouths out of pie dough and bake
    • Finally, get ready to frost cake! Cut round cake in half, set upright on cut sides. Frost.
    • Watch sadly as frosting slides down the cake between the layers pushing them apart. Apparently I added too much banana flavoring to the vanilla frosting, making it too thin.
    • Scrape frosting out of space between two layers and try again. Repeat slide.
    • Grumble, sigh, and stomp over to blender cabinet. Open carefully... so carefully but nothing falls over this time. Pull out glass pie pan
    • Swear that pie crust is getting too browned and pull sheet out of oven. burn hand.
    • Slide pieces of frosted cake into pie pan. Decorate with chocolate chips, almonds, Halloween marshmallow eyeballs, pie crust cut into shape of mouth.
    • Sigh. Clean up kitchen from mess.
    • 5:00. Steve calls. Start pulling out ingredients for dinner.
    • 5:03 PM. Stupid power goes out. No oven to bake Campbell's Chicken Cheese enchiladas: a favorite of Steve's.
    • Call Steve back (our cordless phone cut him off) and make arrangements for Taco Tuesday at Taco Bell for dinner.
    • Rush around the family room to at least get ONE room clean for Steve's birthday

    Simple plans just never seem to stay simple. Sigh...

    By the way, this is what my cake was supposed to look like:

    Fish Birthday Cake Photo

     

    and this is what it ended up looking like:

    puffer fish cake

    June 01

    Ah, the sweet smell of spring...

    Soil. Rusty shovels. Disintegrating bulbs rotting in the ground. Plastic tubs.
     
    But first, a word from the backseat:
    BEN: Why do they put big heavy stones on dead people?
    [We were driving past a cemetary]
    PAPA: So they don't dig their way to the surface.
    MAMA: <SMACK!>
    PAPA: What? Too young for zombies?
     
     
    Busy day today. We planted 6 pieris, 7 day lilies, 2 davidii, 1 fancy-schmancy plant, 3 azaleas, 2 ilex sky pencils, and about one thousand annuals for color. OK, maybe not 1000 but Auntie Karen got pretty excited about being able to come out and do real gardening rather than the weeding we usually stick her with when she visits.
     
    Why so many plants? Because when we moved in here almost 4 years ago now the yard was so completely overgrown we ripped out almost everything in the front yard and either tossed it or moved it around to even out the spacing. Our yard has been nekkid for a very long time. We hired a very nice landscaper lady to provide us with THE PLAN. She offered to have her company come out and implement THE PLAN for the low, low cost of upwards of 20K.
     
    We declined. Politely.
     
    So, today, we took the time to plant three of the beds according to THE PLAN. Our neighbors seem quite pleased our yard is finally getting dressed. It's as if our yard has put on its pants finally.
     
    Maybe next year it will put on its shirt too...
     
     
     
    March 17

    Orange cats are fat

    and dumb.
     
    Oh, I'm sure you know the smartest trimmest orange cat around but I've never seen it. Every orange cat I've ever met is fat and dumb.
     
    Case in point: our cat Pixel. All 20-plus pounds of him.
     
    Today he is limping and walking very, very slowly.
     
    Yesterday, he fell.
     
    From the second storey. All the way down to the first storey.
     
    That's a whole lotta cat. Makes a LOUD sound when he hits bottom.
     
    Here's a picture of him from last year.
     
    He's bigger now.
     

    005