- It is still dark out at 6:45 in the morning.
- Had I known that two days out of the five my girls would have to come to school wearing their PE clothes I could have saved money on the number of uniforms I purchased.
- Lots of changes were made this year, but the early notification on events was not one of them.
- It took only one day before I had to start dragging the girls out of bed.
- The teachers believe in making the parents suffer by handing out homework on the first day. Hey, even the teachers got a week to get acclimated!
- I hate making lunches.
- Backpacks take up quite a bit of space in my small house.
- It took one week exactly for the first test for my fifth grader; two of them: vocabulary and spelling.
- The teachers are still smiling.
- Why do I need a notary to okay my signature when I'm filling out forms on my own child? Like what, I'm going to have someone else fill it out incorrectly and then sign my name?
- Can't they just send out a change form instead of the same papers year after year? It takes everything I have not to write "same as last year and the year before that".
- We are ready for a vacation (hello, Labor Day and DisneyWorld).
- Eight hours is a long time to be without my girls!
Monday, August 31, 2009
1st Week of School Summary
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Out of the mouths of someone else's babe - Sydney
Sydney: I want ice cream now too!"
Me: "Whoa there. Look at this plate full of food."
Sydney: "So?"
Me: "You haven't even touched it. There are starving children in Africa. They would give anything to have this food and here you are throwing away an entire plate of good food."
Sydney: (raising her brow in a 'like that is my problem' look, she puts her arms out, palms up): "Well, if those kids in Africa don't know where this place is..."
Me: "Whoa there. Look at this plate full of food."
Sydney: "So?"
Me: "You haven't even touched it. There are starving children in Africa. They would give anything to have this food and here you are throwing away an entire plate of good food."
Sydney: (raising her brow in a 'like that is my problem' look, she puts her arms out, palms up): "Well, if those kids in Africa don't know where this place is..."
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
From the email box
I got this yesterday and some of them were so good I thought I had to share them. I'm thinking this might be a weekly blog topic for some of us. Enjoy!
Random Thoughts
- MapQuest really needs to start their directions on #5. I'm pretty sure I know how to get out of my own neighborhood. - So true...I've started highlighting at #5 and print only those sections.
- Can we all just agree to ignore whatever comes after DVD's? I don't want to have to restart my movie collection again. - I look at all my kids' videos and wonder what in the world we will do with them in five years. Yet, I refuse to purchase them in DVD form knowing that they too will be obsolete.
- More often than not, when someone is telling me a story all I can think about is that I can't wait for them to finish so that I can tell my own story that's not only better, but that more directly involves me. - For me, everyone's story reminds me of a story that I just know they will want to hear.
- Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you realize you're wrong. - Rarely happens to me....(kidding)
- I totally take back all those times I didn't want to nap when I was younger. - The nice thing about being a SAHM and the kids head off to school.....naps when you want them!
- I would rather try to carry ten plastic grocery bags in each hand than take two trips to bring my groceries in. - Of course, now I have my canvas reusables, but it still holds true for them as well.
- I think part of a best friend's job should be to immediately clear your computer history if you die. - Hear that Kelly? I'll do it for you!
- LOL has gone from meaning, "laugh out loud" to "I have nothing else to say or to add". - I hate this acronym. It is one of my pet peeves.
- I have a hard time deciphering the fine line between boredom and hunger. - Okay, maybe this one isn't so hard, but controlling it is.
- Bad decisions make for great blogging. - Backed into a mailman lately?
- "Do not machine wash or tumble dry" means I will never wash this ever. - For me it means I won't be purchasing it ever.
- As a driver I hate pedestrians and as a pedestrian I hate drivers. - I think about this one a lot in the parking lot of the grocery. I park, walk into the grocery, and get so annoyed at the driver's who do not yield for us. After I shop, load up the car and head out of the parking lot I get so annoyed at those pedestrians that just can't wait a minute for me to pass.
- I wonder if cops ever get pissed off at the fact that everyone they drive behind obeys the speed limit. - Some do and hightail it around us.
- Even under ideal conditions people have trouble locating their car keys, hitting the G-spot, and pinning the tail on the donkey, but I'd bet my life that everyone can push the snooze button from 3 feet away in 1.7 seconds, eyes closed, first time every time. - Did it this morning!
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Out of the mouths of my babes...
Me: (harvesting Farmville crops) "Hmmm....what to plant, what to plant. Help me, Darcy."
Darcy: "What?"
Me: "What should I plant?"
Darcy: "How about you plant one right on me!"
Darcy: "What?"
Me: "What should I plant?"
Darcy: "How about you plant one right on me!"
Farming in the virtual world of Farmville
Once I got the hang of my computer I slowly started playing a few games on it. As I got better I upgraded from solitaire and enjoyed different types of free games on Yahoo. Then I got introduced to Facebook and the types of games that were available to the users. I started out playing a game called Scramble, but eventually after several months of needing my fix I searched around for something else. That's when I found Farmville.
Farmville is what I would loosely call a game. I'm not really competing against anyone, not even the computer, (although when my friend announced to me that she checked her neighbor list to make sure she had accumulated more money than anyone else I find myself wanting to out-earn her, but that's just my competitive nature) but I find it jolly fun.
The application is a farm. You create a person that owns the farm and then you begin building your farm with crops, trees, animals, buildings, decorations, etc. To earn money to pay for all of this you must plant and harvest crops. You are given some money in the beginning, but the rest is up to you. Also, the seeds you purchase all cost something different and earn you different amounts. I found that I actually had to use some math to figure out which crops would yield me a better return on my investment.
As your farm begins to build you start adding neighbors with others who are playing Farmville and who are on your friend list. You then can go to visit their farms, help out with pesky crows, weeds, etc. and earn experience points. As you gain in the points you move up the levels, and as you move up the levels, more stuff is available to you to purchase, plant, and gift.
The problem with the game, besides the slowness that I have encountered, is that it sucks you into its virtual world. You suddenly really believe that you are rich and that this farm is thriving under your green thumb. One night after harvesting squash on my farm we happen to have it for dinner. For a moment I believed it might have come right out of my farm it was so good!
The game is certainly addicting and lucky for me, I don't have a 9 to 5 job that keeps me from my farm. So when the "Super Berries" were introduced for a limited time and yielded a huge return I was able to plant and harvest them every 2 hours until I had a nice little cache in my purse. Now I'm working toward a house and a bigger plot of land.
Finally, something to keep me occupied while my daughters start school today.
Farmville is what I would loosely call a game. I'm not really competing against anyone, not even the computer, (although when my friend announced to me that she checked her neighbor list to make sure she had accumulated more money than anyone else I find myself wanting to out-earn her, but that's just my competitive nature) but I find it jolly fun.
The application is a farm. You create a person that owns the farm and then you begin building your farm with crops, trees, animals, buildings, decorations, etc. To earn money to pay for all of this you must plant and harvest crops. You are given some money in the beginning, but the rest is up to you. Also, the seeds you purchase all cost something different and earn you different amounts. I found that I actually had to use some math to figure out which crops would yield me a better return on my investment.
As your farm begins to build you start adding neighbors with others who are playing Farmville and who are on your friend list. You then can go to visit their farms, help out with pesky crows, weeds, etc. and earn experience points. As you gain in the points you move up the levels, and as you move up the levels, more stuff is available to you to purchase, plant, and gift.
The problem with the game, besides the slowness that I have encountered, is that it sucks you into its virtual world. You suddenly really believe that you are rich and that this farm is thriving under your green thumb. One night after harvesting squash on my farm we happen to have it for dinner. For a moment I believed it might have come right out of my farm it was so good!
The game is certainly addicting and lucky for me, I don't have a 9 to 5 job that keeps me from my farm. So when the "Super Berries" were introduced for a limited time and yielded a huge return I was able to plant and harvest them every 2 hours until I had a nice little cache in my purse. Now I'm working toward a house and a bigger plot of land.
Finally, something to keep me occupied while my daughters start school today.
Monday, August 24, 2009
Weekend Memories
- She took the noodles, some rings, the raft and she built a boat.
- The contest involved a plate full of whipped topping from a can and she was in heaven when the contest leader told the group they were to devour it.
- The game went into extra innings, the concert ended late, the walk to the car was long and she fell asleep in the backseat, her head up against the camera bag.
- She talks slowly because her mouth is full of new metal, poking and prodding the inside of her virgin cheeks, and she doesn't complain, but her face tells the story.
- They went with leaden feet, but when they saw their school chums and even their teachers they smiled and suddenly the new school year didn't seem so bad.
Sunday, August 23, 2009
Down in front, please.
I'm a Hoosier, and in Hoosier-land we attend basketball games. It's just the way it is. Basketball is life in Indiana. I can't tell you how many games I attended while living in Indiana; grade school games, high school games, college games, pro games, pick-up games, exhibition games, you name it I was there.
At a basketball game, people sit in their seats and watch the game. When they need to hit the restrooms or freshen their drinks, they wait for halftime. I don't remember ever having to peek around someone walking up the steps during the game unless it was toward the end, and one team was severely ahead. (And that is just another whole blog for another time)
Last night I attended the Tampa Rays baseball game. It was a Saturday summer night concert series where after the game, a headliner comes out to a stage set up in the outfield and performs. The concert is free with a ticket to the game. Because we hadn't been to a game all year and because Big and Rich were performing, we ordered up tickets.
Our seats were a section down from the nose bleeders a tad left of third base. We were seated at the end of the row. In between our section and the next was a tunnel leading in and out of the stadium. Which meant stairs on either side of the tunnel. To watch the game, we had to turn to the right and look over the tunnel. The seats were actually not bad. The indoor stadium is built in a way that every chair I've ever sat in has a good view of the field. That is....if people sit and watch the game!
From the moment we sat down at the first pitch, people were up and down the stairs on either side of the tunnel opening. If they weren't standing up to let others pass through, then they were wandering to their seats or heading down for food. None more so than directly in the row in front of us. Those people came and went at a rate faster than those entering and exiting a ride at Disney World.
First, a tall, twenty-something kid was sitting in front of us. Because he was so tall and sitting at the end of the row, it was difficult for Darcy and me to see over his head. He got up and moved when two men entered the row and sat four seats away from him. We were quite thrilled as it left open the seats directly in front of us.
Not for long, however. Next, came two women who had the seats in front of Madison and me. They sat down with their beers and checked their cell phones. They chatted and giggled. Then they got a call and up and left.
Next up were a pair who sat to the left of the men. After they were seated, in came two ladies with margaritas in their hands. They saw that their assigned seats were taken, so they sat in the vacated seats that the other ladies had left. They were there for about ten minutes and in came a family.
Someone was in their seats down the row so out came the two who didn't belong and in went the family. This caused the two men to move down one space to their assigned seats. This, in turn, opened up the ladies' assigned seats, so they moved. We were wide open once more.
BUT...not for long. In came two more people. They lasted about three minutes, got up, and moved two rows to the right of us. It wasn't empty for long before a lone man got kicked out of his seat two rows in front of us, and he plopped down in front of Madison. He ended up sitting there until the 7th inning, and then he too disappeared.
Three rows in front of us at the end were a couple. They had to get up and down to let people in and out of their row over ten times, and then they got up and down four more times to go and get food and beers.
At one point, during an exciting play, a man came up the stairs wearing only one shoe and reeking of alcohol. He slipped and fell backward, landing on a buxom woman wearing a blond Dolly Parton wig who leaned over the tunnel screaming at someone to help her. The one-shoed man, now lying on the stairs and staring up at us, kept saying in a small voice that everything was fine.
Immediately, two men in blue shirts were up the stairs assisting this man into a seat, which was not the one he had paid for. Two seconds later, security was escorting him out of the seat and back out through the tunnel.
Up and down the stairs on either side of the tunnel came people. They left and returned with beers. They left and returned with piles of nachos, hotdogs, and soft drinks. They left and returned with cotton candy and popcorn. Then they left to hit the restrooms. When they returned, they had more food. All of this happening DURING THE GAME. Not at each changeover. Not during the 7th inning stretch. DURING THE GAME.
It was very annoying, but the more it kept happening and the more we had entertaining nonsense occurring (like the one-shoed man), the more we just had to laugh and shrug. Welcome to baseball. I wondered aloud: Did anyone know the score? Did anyone know who had hit the home runs? Would anyone even bother to come if food wasn't sold?
The Rays won in extra innings, where those of us actually watching the game stood to make sure we got it all. Carlo Pena (whose daughter attends our school) was the hero of the night with his two homers and his batting in the winning run. It made for an exciting game, both on and off the field.
We ended the night watching Big and Rich (I think I was the only one of my family enjoying them) and didn't leave the stadium until after 1:00 PM. A good way, albeit an expensive one, to spend a Saturday night with the family. AS LONG AS YOU ARE SITTING DOWN!
At a basketball game, people sit in their seats and watch the game. When they need to hit the restrooms or freshen their drinks, they wait for halftime. I don't remember ever having to peek around someone walking up the steps during the game unless it was toward the end, and one team was severely ahead. (And that is just another whole blog for another time)
Last night I attended the Tampa Rays baseball game. It was a Saturday summer night concert series where after the game, a headliner comes out to a stage set up in the outfield and performs. The concert is free with a ticket to the game. Because we hadn't been to a game all year and because Big and Rich were performing, we ordered up tickets.
Our seats were a section down from the nose bleeders a tad left of third base. We were seated at the end of the row. In between our section and the next was a tunnel leading in and out of the stadium. Which meant stairs on either side of the tunnel. To watch the game, we had to turn to the right and look over the tunnel. The seats were actually not bad. The indoor stadium is built in a way that every chair I've ever sat in has a good view of the field. That is....if people sit and watch the game!
From the moment we sat down at the first pitch, people were up and down the stairs on either side of the tunnel opening. If they weren't standing up to let others pass through, then they were wandering to their seats or heading down for food. None more so than directly in the row in front of us. Those people came and went at a rate faster than those entering and exiting a ride at Disney World.
First, a tall, twenty-something kid was sitting in front of us. Because he was so tall and sitting at the end of the row, it was difficult for Darcy and me to see over his head. He got up and moved when two men entered the row and sat four seats away from him. We were quite thrilled as it left open the seats directly in front of us.
Not for long, however. Next, came two women who had the seats in front of Madison and me. They sat down with their beers and checked their cell phones. They chatted and giggled. Then they got a call and up and left.
Next up were a pair who sat to the left of the men. After they were seated, in came two ladies with margaritas in their hands. They saw that their assigned seats were taken, so they sat in the vacated seats that the other ladies had left. They were there for about ten minutes and in came a family.
Someone was in their seats down the row so out came the two who didn't belong and in went the family. This caused the two men to move down one space to their assigned seats. This, in turn, opened up the ladies' assigned seats, so they moved. We were wide open once more.
BUT...not for long. In came two more people. They lasted about three minutes, got up, and moved two rows to the right of us. It wasn't empty for long before a lone man got kicked out of his seat two rows in front of us, and he plopped down in front of Madison. He ended up sitting there until the 7th inning, and then he too disappeared.
Three rows in front of us at the end were a couple. They had to get up and down to let people in and out of their row over ten times, and then they got up and down four more times to go and get food and beers.
At one point, during an exciting play, a man came up the stairs wearing only one shoe and reeking of alcohol. He slipped and fell backward, landing on a buxom woman wearing a blond Dolly Parton wig who leaned over the tunnel screaming at someone to help her. The one-shoed man, now lying on the stairs and staring up at us, kept saying in a small voice that everything was fine.
Immediately, two men in blue shirts were up the stairs assisting this man into a seat, which was not the one he had paid for. Two seconds later, security was escorting him out of the seat and back out through the tunnel.
Up and down the stairs on either side of the tunnel came people. They left and returned with beers. They left and returned with piles of nachos, hotdogs, and soft drinks. They left and returned with cotton candy and popcorn. Then they left to hit the restrooms. When they returned, they had more food. All of this happening DURING THE GAME. Not at each changeover. Not during the 7th inning stretch. DURING THE GAME.
It was very annoying, but the more it kept happening and the more we had entertaining nonsense occurring (like the one-shoed man), the more we just had to laugh and shrug. Welcome to baseball. I wondered aloud: Did anyone know the score? Did anyone know who had hit the home runs? Would anyone even bother to come if food wasn't sold?
The Rays won in extra innings, where those of us actually watching the game stood to make sure we got it all. Carlo Pena (whose daughter attends our school) was the hero of the night with his two homers and his batting in the winning run. It made for an exciting game, both on and off the field.
We ended the night watching Big and Rich (I think I was the only one of my family enjoying them) and didn't leave the stadium until after 1:00 PM. A good way, albeit an expensive one, to spend a Saturday night with the family. AS LONG AS YOU ARE SITTING DOWN!
Saturday, August 22, 2009
I'm YOUNG!
When I turned 40 everything in and out of my body began just going downhill and it was all attributed to my age.
Close up eyesight weakening? Check. "That happens as you get older," the doctor told me.
Problem losing that extra ten pounds? Check. "It does get harder as you get older," the doctor told me.
Cavities? Check. "As you age your enamel gets weaker," the dentist told me.
Period problems? Check. "Once you get in your forties the pre-menopausal symptoms began," my doctor told me.
Tiredness? Check.
Gray hair? Check.
All because I was getting older.
Two months ago, and four months after having cataract surgery at the age of 44, my right eye became red and bothersome. I wasn't able to see my surgeon as he was on vacation so I got directed to the eye PA. He told me I had some mild inflammation and prescribed some steroid drops.
When I returned a few weeks later the inflammation was gone and so the PA began weaning me slowly off the drops. About two weeks after stopping the drops my eye began bothering me again. Because I was on vacation I self-medicated, following the PA's advice, which was to start the drops again and give him a call. I didn't call him until I got back from vacation. Instead of getting through to him I got routed to my surgeon's team.
His assistant informed me that he wasn't available, but that the team had reviewed my case and decided that I needed to see a retina specialist who was available the next day. I repeated the PA's advice, but she was determined and so I made the appointment.
Yesterday I met a retina specialist. Not only was he good looking, but he was the best doctor I have ever had. He told me that I was having this inflammation because I was young.
YOUNG! YOUNG! YOUNG! Not old. YOUNG!
Apparently, when you are YOUNG and have cataract surgery your immune system is much stronger than say, a 70-year-old, which is the typical median age for that type of surgery. Because the immune system is stronger it is wondering why these foreign instruments and such have invaded the eye and so it sends in the troops to protect, thus resulting in my eye to be inflamed from all the fighting. At least this is what I got out of his explanation...I was a tad distracted from trying not to kiss him for saying I was YOUNG!
He was very perplexed why I was seeing him and a tad annoyed that I wasn't seeing my surgeon who would "certainly want to know this was happening to you." So back on the drops and I see the surgeon in ten days. I think it will take me at least that long to come down from the high he gave me.
I'm YOUNG!
Close up eyesight weakening? Check. "That happens as you get older," the doctor told me.
Problem losing that extra ten pounds? Check. "It does get harder as you get older," the doctor told me.
Cavities? Check. "As you age your enamel gets weaker," the dentist told me.
Period problems? Check. "Once you get in your forties the pre-menopausal symptoms began," my doctor told me.
Tiredness? Check.
Gray hair? Check.
All because I was getting older.
Two months ago, and four months after having cataract surgery at the age of 44, my right eye became red and bothersome. I wasn't able to see my surgeon as he was on vacation so I got directed to the eye PA. He told me I had some mild inflammation and prescribed some steroid drops.
When I returned a few weeks later the inflammation was gone and so the PA began weaning me slowly off the drops. About two weeks after stopping the drops my eye began bothering me again. Because I was on vacation I self-medicated, following the PA's advice, which was to start the drops again and give him a call. I didn't call him until I got back from vacation. Instead of getting through to him I got routed to my surgeon's team.
His assistant informed me that he wasn't available, but that the team had reviewed my case and decided that I needed to see a retina specialist who was available the next day. I repeated the PA's advice, but she was determined and so I made the appointment.
Yesterday I met a retina specialist. Not only was he good looking, but he was the best doctor I have ever had. He told me that I was having this inflammation because I was young.
YOUNG! YOUNG! YOUNG! Not old. YOUNG!
Apparently, when you are YOUNG and have cataract surgery your immune system is much stronger than say, a 70-year-old, which is the typical median age for that type of surgery. Because the immune system is stronger it is wondering why these foreign instruments and such have invaded the eye and so it sends in the troops to protect, thus resulting in my eye to be inflamed from all the fighting. At least this is what I got out of his explanation...I was a tad distracted from trying not to kiss him for saying I was YOUNG!
He was very perplexed why I was seeing him and a tad annoyed that I wasn't seeing my surgeon who would "certainly want to know this was happening to you." So back on the drops and I see the surgeon in ten days. I think it will take me at least that long to come down from the high he gave me.
I'm YOUNG!
Friday, August 21, 2009
Out of the mouths of someone else's babe - Sydney
Today was spent with SueG who has younger children, Sydney who is four and Alex who is eight. We started out at the local pool by the beach but a storm rolled in and so we ended up at the pool at my house where it was not storming. Before we entered the house I spoke to the young children.
Me: "Now listen up, guys. Miss Cara has some stuff in the playroom that is not to be touched. It is messy in because I 'm working on a project and I had to leave the stuff out. Leave it alone and don't mess with it."
Sydney - "What is it?"
Me: "It's a bunch of crap, but I don't want you to touch it."
I unlocked the door and let them into the house. Immediately both went right to the entrance of the playroom. I came up behind them to reiterate again the importance of not messing with my items. Instead, I heard the following exchange:
Alex - "There it is right there."
Sydney - "Yep. That's the crap."
Me: "Now listen up, guys. Miss Cara has some stuff in the playroom that is not to be touched. It is messy in because I 'm working on a project and I had to leave the stuff out. Leave it alone and don't mess with it."
Sydney - "What is it?"
Me: "It's a bunch of crap, but I don't want you to touch it."
I unlocked the door and let them into the house. Immediately both went right to the entrance of the playroom. I came up behind them to reiterate again the importance of not messing with my items. Instead, I heard the following exchange:
Alex - "There it is right there."
Sydney - "Yep. That's the crap."
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Out of the mouths of my babes
Me: "Wow. Every time I point a camera at you, you smile. "
Darcy: "Well, if I were Aunt Suzie I would look like this!"
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Back to reality and changes
Yesterday we picked up the glasses that the girls ordered for their farsightedness. I made the appointment for 4:00 PM and then promptly forgot about it while running errands. We got caught in a horrific lightning storm while at Target and so we just casually kept on shopping while the rain pounding on the ceiling as if a hundred elves were hammering on a new roof.
When we finally ran across the parking lot in between bolts I was exhausted and hungry. I headed for home and then Darcy remembered our appointment. It was 4:20. I didn't have the phone number to the office so I headed there anyway. We got there at 4:30 and the entire area was dry as a bone. They hadn't gotten any rain nor had they gotten any lightning which was my lying excuse for not getting there on time. She thought I was a big fraud. Whatever.
Darcy has been quite diligent on wearing her glasses. After all of the drama with the eye appointment and glasses (see July 27th post titled "Is anything clear? ") she announces that when she reads the words sometimes blur and she has to close her eyes to refocus. Wearing the glasses this doesn't happen.
Madison, on the other hand, claimed the glasses hurt as soon as the lady put them on her face. We thought she meant behind her ears, but she meant reading with them. She has yet to wear her glasses, but I have found that they are apparently the same prescription as the ones I buy over the counter so if I ever need a decent pair.....
Also, today was the day Madison got her braces. We had to roll out of bed quite early for this appointment so we weren't very awake nor happy at all. This picture is the before picture. Notice how happy she seems...
This is the after photo. She was in the chair well over an hour and a half, but she handled it like a Mason warrior. She chose aqua as the color of her bands and they match nicely with her red hair, but they are quite bright when she smiles. She has some discomfort, but she sucked down a McDonald's hamburger, fries and shake quite easily.
Yep, vacation is over and our life is back to normal.
When we finally ran across the parking lot in between bolts I was exhausted and hungry. I headed for home and then Darcy remembered our appointment. It was 4:20. I didn't have the phone number to the office so I headed there anyway. We got there at 4:30 and the entire area was dry as a bone. They hadn't gotten any rain nor had they gotten any lightning which was my lying excuse for not getting there on time. She thought I was a big fraud. Whatever.
Darcy has been quite diligent on wearing her glasses. After all of the drama with the eye appointment and glasses (see July 27th post titled "Is anything clear? ") she announces that when she reads the words sometimes blur and she has to close her eyes to refocus. Wearing the glasses this doesn't happen.
Madison, on the other hand, claimed the glasses hurt as soon as the lady put them on her face. We thought she meant behind her ears, but she meant reading with them. She has yet to wear her glasses, but I have found that they are apparently the same prescription as the ones I buy over the counter so if I ever need a decent pair.....
Also, today was the day Madison got her braces. We had to roll out of bed quite early for this appointment so we weren't very awake nor happy at all. This picture is the before picture. Notice how happy she seems...
This is the after photo. She was in the chair well over an hour and a half, but she handled it like a Mason warrior. She chose aqua as the color of her bands and they match nicely with her red hair, but they are quite bright when she smiles. She has some discomfort, but she sucked down a McDonald's hamburger, fries and shake quite easily.
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Last day of vacation
On our last day, we explored the capitol that morning where a farmer's market was happening in front of the capitol building. We enjoyed some pastries and wonderful lattes at a cafe across the street.
Kelly picked us up at the airport and we ended the night with some shakes at Steak n' Shakes (along with some burgers and fries) before heading home to reality.
Another good vacation comes to an end.
After our breakfast, we headed over to explore the market. It was so beautiful I had to take a photo. There is nothing like the midwest for fruits and vegetables. I so wanted to buy a suitcase and pack it with corn, melon, potatoes, and carrots. I also found my mint that I have been wanting to grow at my house, but alas, because I was flying I had to leave without it.
We flew from Madison to Chicago where we had to walk from one end of the O'Hare airport to the other end. It took us 25 minutes and when I sat down my legs were jittering as if I had worked out on the elliptical. Madison and I went to the bathroom and were standing at a kiosk buying water when we looked up to see our friends in the airport. I knew they were heading home that day from the Windy City, and before I left to hit the bathroom I had suggested to Darcy that she text them. Turns out we were on the same flight. They had four seats four rows behind us.
Another good vacation comes to an end.
Cave of the Mounds
This cave, Cave of the Mounds, was on the dells site I read before going to Wisconsin. Because it was in the same direction as the winery I insisted that this be our second adventure of the day and because who doesn't love cooling off in a cave?
The history of the cave was given to us via a DVD as well as from a tour guide through the cave. The cave was found when workers on the property were blasting limestone from the property. One of the blasts blew the face off the quarry and exposed a giant underground cave. Because Wisconsin had never seen anything like it many people flocked to the site to view the big cave. Luckily the family had the fortitude to close off the cave and to preserve it.
Lights and wooden walkways were installed and in 1940 the cave was opened to visitors. Eventually, as time passed the cave was updated with concrete pathways and theatrical lighting.
The cave is mainly limestone made from compacted seashells and marine sediments. The rock dates back over 400 million years when the Earth was covered with water. As the water receded it left these layers of rock behind and erosion began to wear them down.
The cave is probably 1 to 2 million years old. It was formed along the "lifeline" crack that can be seen when touring the cave. There are many areas that go back several feet and are not passable without destroying the walls of the cave so the lighting is used to show the depth.
The pathway was easy to maneuver, except for one narrow area, and although it was wet and chilly (50 degrees year-round) I made it through the tour in my Crocs. Yes, my crocs. Not exactly the shoes for cave exploring, but, hey, we made it!
Saturday, August 15, 2009
Madison's Vacation Faces
Madison at the airport
Madison in downtown Madison
Madison at the marketplace
Celebrating Madison like we always do......
Darcy's Vacation Faces
St. Darcy
Hot Dog Darcy
Chicken Darcy
Nun Darcy
Alien Darcy
Cheesehead Darcy
Darcy, full of bull......
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