Climb Every Mountain

Last Saturday Bill decided (the day before) to do the Kendall Mountain run in Silverton. It’s basically a half marathon up a big mountain and then down the big mountain. You start at 9,318 feet, run up to 13,066 feet, then down down down again. Bill did awesome! Was happy and cheerful at the end! And only had a few monster blisters that have taken a week to heal as souvenirs. Way to go, Billy!

Fantesstic Friday

Little Miss Grabby Hands likes to snatch at anything. She’s tasted curry, ketchup, pickle juice, and coffee by virtue of sticking her fingers in my plate and moving them immediately to her mouth. Can’t say she’s really been a fan of any of these grown-up foods, but she’s interested in exploring anything we bring to the table. Or anything we put near her, edible or not. Tessa is a very intentional baby. You can see her look at something, concentrate on it, and then deliberately move her body and hands toward it to grab it. She’s not some fly-by-night, trial-by-error, shoot a sea of bullets and one will probably hit the mark girl. She focuses on what she wants, takes aim, and gets it.

In that vein, Tess is in the fun phase of “throw it away and then try to get it back.” So we’ll be sitting on the floor playing with toys and she’ll throw all of them out of her reach and then see if she can somehow maneuver herself within range to bring them back for play. This is a fine game on the floor and will eventually be how she teaches herself to crawl. It’s a bit more frustrating, say, at the table where things just drop to the floor out of sight and reach. Mama don’t play that game (more than twice or three times).

Fantesstic Friday

Guess who loves orange food? Sweet potatoes and carrots have been instant hits. I seem to remember Maggie was the same way. And of course bananas always get high marks; applesauce seems to be growing on her too. So far she’s eating real food twice a day and she’s loving it. She gets super excited when she sees her spoon come out. Another future foodie!

Tess has kind of switched up her middle of the night eating habits. A couple weeks ago she was all over the board for when she woke up. Always just once, but sometimes as early as 1, sometimes 5, and everything in between. This week she’s settled on 1, which is not making me very happy. It falls in a weird place in my sleep schedule I think, and I can’t remember how or when we started to regulate or eliminate Maggie’s mid-night feedings. Guess it’s time to hit those parenting books again.

And I don’t think we’ve updated with our opinion about her hair color. We’re thinking Tessa will be a blonde. Her hair is going in that direction, and her eyebrows have always been fairly invisible. So one Ariel princess and one Aurora (Sleeping Beauty) princess in our family we think.

Maggnificence

We may have entered a bug phase with Maggie. There is this guy, a huuuuge beetle we found dead in the gutter on our way home from a hike. Maggie just sat right down and picked it up and started looking at it from all angles. She was very curious about how it died (perhaps drowning in a huge downpour the evening before, perhaps heat exhaustion and dehydration from earlier in the day). And also very curious about if the ants would do a good enough job eating him up now. The last thing she said upon leaving him in the gutter was “let’s come back and check if the ants have eaten all of him up.” And a couple days ago Mags came in from the backyard with something between her thumb and index fingers and started walking upstairs. “Whatcha got there, Maggie?” I asked, feigning nonchalance. “A roly poly. I’ve decided he’s going to be my pet upstairs.” “Bugs belong outside, sweetie, especially when we’re staying in someone else’s house.” “Blah blah blah blah blah blah.” “Blah blah blah blah blah blah.” “Blah blah blah.” “Blah blah blah.” “But it’s just a rock. I’m just pretending.” “Oh. Ok. That’s ok then.” When I went upstairs later, I looked on a windowsill and there indeed was a roly poly. “Maggie, this is a real roly poly. I thought you said it was a pretend one, a rock.” “Well, it’s just a rock that moves.”


And this, appropos of nothing, from last night, which continues to blow my mind. We’ve been eating out of the garden every day, at least one meal. Usually that means salad, which is very disappointing to Maggie. Last night it was rainy so we opted for garden soup instead: kohlrabi, broccoli, kohlrabi greens (similar to but tougher than collard greens), yellow squash, carrots cooked in a chicken broth. This soup had a strong flavor, and the greens were quite prominent. Maggie ate five helpings. And asked for sixths. Whereupon we told her that if she ate any more her stomach would explode.

Fantesstic Friday

Well, we went down the dreaded path: sleep training. With Maggie this was arduous, tortuous, and seemingly endless. Tess was beginning to require hours of street-walking to fall deeply asleep before she could be transferred successfully to her crib for the night. While this was alright at our house and built up my arm muscles, and included a lot of socializing with the neighbors, it was getting a bit out of hand and this new neighborhood is too busy. Plus, soon she will be big and strong enough to catapult herself out of her crib if she decides she’s unhappy being in there. So we bit the bullet last week and just went for it. The first night, she cried  a little bit and we went in a number of times to whisper soothing parent words in her ear. It took her half an hour to go to sleep and she didn’t wake up any more or earlier than normal that night. The next night I put her in her crib again, and she went right to sleep. No tears. No fussing. Not even any squirming. And the night after that. And after that. And the nap after that. We now have a baby that we can put in her crib, give a kiss, and walk away from. And she will go to sleep. Astonishing!

And Tess is mobile now too. Not crawling mobile. But rolling all over the heck. She can travel from one end of a room to the other just by going from back to tummy to back to tummy. Goodbye setting her in the middle of the bed and brushing my teeth! Maggie thinks it’s pretty funny to watch her roly-poly herself around. I think she’s happy about being a tiny bit in control of some locomotion too.

There’s also been new food for Tessa. Applesauce and bananas are her number one choice. Green beans have not been her favorite at all. Her little sour face is precious! I almost want to keep feeding them to her just to see her make the face. And she’s so eager to please that she’ll just keep opening her mouth for the next bite. We’ll see this week what she thinks of carrots and sweet potatoes.