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Showing posts with label rain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rain. Show all posts

Saturday, October 1, 2016

An Adventure Filled Black Week



One of my most favorite people (and college roomie) came up from Oklahoma with her kiddos to spend the week with us. We had so much fun! They lived in Hawaii for the last several years so Charlie and Manu (as she refers to him on her blog) had never met and I had never met either of her boys.
 
They all hit it off well (except for a few skirmishes between the two older boys...).


Jane is holding a berry for D to smash with the rock in his hand. :) Jane referred to D as "the baby" up until the day before they left. Manu kept on telling her that D was a toddler, not a baby.

 
"The baby" wanted to come inside but this face was so incredibly funny that we left him out for a while just to get some pictures of it.

 
We made the most of our week together and did something fun each day. One excursion was to the butterfly house. I could hang out there for a long time. Watching butterflies is so relaxing.

 Manu was the first to have a butterfly land on him.

 By the end all of us did, except for the littlest two who moved around a bit too much.

 



 Newly created butterflies!

 Spending time with this wonderful woman makes my heart happy. (notice the blue butterfly photo bombing in the foreground)

 Oh, and if you could knew what sound bees made you got a free honey stick at the gift shop. Yummy sticky goodness.
Hanging out at the super cool playground down the street.

 


 Jane in her "popcorn."


When Charlie found out that Manu had never made a baking soda and vinegar volcano before we absolutely had to do one. Complete with dinosaurs in peril.

 
 Manu walked with me one day to get Charlie from the bus. As we walked he told me of his inner conflict. He loved being here but also missed his dad who was back in Oklahoma. Sweet boy.

 
One afternoon I heard the rumble of thunder and said that it sounded like a storm was coming. Manu, in complete seriousness, looked up and told me that he would go outside and take a look because, as he put it, "I am a meteorologist."

 
 I hadn't taken a good ol' ramble in the woods since coming here so we took the opportunity to do so. The extensive Busch Memorial Conservation Area is about 20 minutes away so off we went. It was incredibly nice to be back in the woods. It is comforting to me to be surrounded by trees. Almost as if they are sheltering me from any outside turmoil. Even a short time in the forest makes me happier.

 
 It is fun to see how much my kids enjoy it too (at least almost always ;)  ).

Friday, their last full day here, I excused Charlie from school and we spent the better part of the day at the super cool science center. In the picture above our budding statisticians are learning about probability curves.


The Black's make promising paleontologists.

Much to my surprise, Jane's favorite part was the big T-rex that moved and roared.


Charlie's favorite part was the excavator with real controls. No surprise there.


This was cool. as you made mountains and valleys with the white sand the computer shining light from about would adjust to make topographical lines on the sand formations.

Watching cars go by on the freeway below the science center bridge.


The week went by entirely too fast. Come back soon Deb! We miss you already!

Sunday, July 12, 2015

A Very Happy 4th

This past weekend, in celebration of the birth of our nation, we visited one of the many things I love about this country: its National Parks. Specifically Theodore Roosevelt National Park in western North Dakota. In a nutshell, it was great fun.

We are still forgetting that things have changed fairly drastically regarding camping since our newly wed days. Back then we could decide we wanted to go hiking as we got off work Friday afternoon and be packed and headed for the trail head less than an hour later. It has gone from that to getting out the door three hours later than planned. That means that after the 5 hour drive we would be getting to camp, picking out a site, setting up camp, and getting the kids ready for and in bed all by headlamp.

We debated in our minds for a bit, then wimped out and made reservations for a hotel in Bismarck (just over half-way). On our way we came up with ideas for making our next camping trip departure time closer to when planned. Hopefully they work. We got to camp the next morning and we were all much happier than we otherwise would have been.

As we got closer to the park the scenery still hadn't changed much at all. Keith remarked that he hoped we hadn't driven 5 hours just to camp somewhere flat. I was wondering the same thing.


We were oh so pleasantly wrong in our worries.

And so began what would be my first time camping since "T-day" and Jane's first time camping. Not to mention our first time camping with two little kids.

After getting camp set up and having lunch we set out on the Little Mo trail. It was so fun to watch the kiddos roam. We had brought a backpack intended for Charlie to carry a few things in but he didn't want to. We didn't push it because as we were asking him Jane was making it very clear that she wanted it. So I put it on her little back, adjusted the straps and watched her dance off in her nearly empty pack. She was tickled pink. 

(This whole thing reminded me of a very similar story my parents tell about me as a small kid...)

Left: Keith is helping Charlie figure out which way to go. Charlie is getting to be quite the little navigator.


Left: It was fun to see little sweaty Jane determined to walk and carry her pack as far as possible. A couple times I would see her kind of pulling at the straps and figured that she wanted it off. Whenever I tried to help her with that, oh boy did she let me know that I had guessed wrong! She walked almost the entire way before wanting Keith to carry her. Right: it wouldn't be a true "Katie nature blog post" without a flower picture.



Charlie, our dutiful guide.

There were these little numbered posts along the way that corresponded with numbers in the map/information pamphlet. Each one had a short paragraph in the pamphlet with a bit of information about something you could see from that particular spot. I loved being able to transform the words in the pamphlet, into words that Charlie could not only understand, but got him excited about what he was seeing. It was pure joy to see Charlie's little mind make connections and to see the fun he had as he did so. My dream job has always been a part-time job where I get to teach kids about the natural world. In the mean time I get the pleasure of practicing on my kids. :)

Jane with her pig tails, oversize jeans, and carrying her doll and sponge. Cuteness overload.
The next day was the 4th and the only full day we had, so we made the most of it. This was the long awaited day to see a prairie dog town! It was the first time for each of us (except Keith) to see one outside of a zoo and I think that even Charlie wasn't as excited as I was.


This was a bit longer (and hotter) hike than the day before, and the kids were a bit more worn out. Jane didn't walk as far (though she still insisted on it starting out) and by the end Charlie was wishing it was shorter, but they were still impressive little hikers. I would comment to Charlie every once in a while about how strong his legs were. Each time he would say "yeah!" and pick up his pace quite a bit. By the time we got back to the car he was telling us about how strong his legs were.


Lately Charlie has been making really funny faces whenever we ask him to "smile for the camera." I love it.


We made it to the HUGE prairie dog town (one of the several in the park) and I was giddy. I was really surprised to see how close they would slowly get to you when your back was turned. If we turned around slowly they wouldn't even run away.


One of the most entertaining things was watching Jane point her little finger each time she saw one and squeal with excitement. Keith would tell her that no, she couldn't keep one. Charlie, in the mean time, began digging another hole for the prairie dogs to live in.

As much as I tried to prolong the inevitable, eventually we had to head back.

I showed Charlie how to rub sage leaves in his fingers to make the smell stronger. The entire place had the wonderful smell of the Utah desert. It brought back happy memories of long solo drives out to my work site during my days at the Forest Service Shrub Lab. When I was out in the quiet expanse of the west desert, without a building in sight, it was easy to forget that there was a noisy city not too far away.

Classic family picture at scenic overlook, complete with one of Charlie's funny faces.
After the hike we drove around the park keeping our eyes open for bison.

"Mr. Triceratops," as Charlie calls him, came along (of course). At one point Charlie asked if Mr. Triceratops could have a picture taken of just himself.


We found bison! There was also a lone male that we saw grazing way up on a cliff side. Unfortunately I couldn't get a picture but it was pretty impressive to see his size and how easily he could get his 3,000+ lbs, 8 ft frame up that cliff with such agility.

Early the next morning Keith and I were awakened to the booming of a major thunderstorm. Several times the thunder would sound like a bomb was going off and we would worry about the kids waking up. Thankfully they never did.

Waking up is hard to do
When we all woke up later to the sound of heavy rain pelting our tent we had a few thoughts going through our minds:
1. It is so nice to have a good tent.
2. I love the sound of rain on a tent.
3. We have two little kids and we need to make them breakfast and we didn't bring a tarp to cover the cooking area!!!
4. Mental note to get a tarp and rope to keep in the camp kitchen box.

 As the onslaught of rain kept coming, we weighed our options we decided to have the kids survive on snacks until we got to a place populated enough to get something real to eat (and Charlie would keep surviving on snacks??? We had just brought stuff for low-phe applesauce pancakes for him which wasn't going to work under present conditions.)

Left: Charlie and Jane entertaining themselves in a puddle while we cooked in the shelter. Right: Jane after running, jumping, and face planting in big puddles back at the campground.
Much to our relief, as we began executing that plan, Keith spotted a lone shelter off in the picnic area. Awesome. We loaded breakfast stuffs into the truck and drove over to cook in the roomy dry shelter. After that (it had conveniently stopped raining, tender mercy) we headed back to camp, packed up and let the kids get some wiggles out in some great big puddles. Oh they had such fun! And I enjoyed it knowing that there was an extra set of clean clothes for each to be put in before we drove home.



It was such a wonderful trip and I am so blessed to have experienced it all with these guys. The thought of all the great adventures we will go on together in the future thrills me. I love them so much!

Oh, and as a bonus, on the drive out there I got another bird for my bird list. My first one in North Dakota. Number 151: the Great Egret.