Autumnal Gardening

In the spring we garden with great diligence. We plant the seeds, and a week later are certain to stare at the dirt almost every single day, checking for any signs of luscious greens ahead. Not so in the fall. A few weeks ago (I really have little idea when, except that it was after August 20, because I was shocked that it had gotten so late so quickly) I planted some seeds (a few lettuces, turnips, beets & kale). Today, September 4, is the second time I’ve looked at them. It seems anticipation of autumnal greens is beaten out by laundry, syllabus writing, classroom set-up, vegetable picking and processing, oh, and spending time with family. It’s interesting how the same action is so much less a focal point when the surrounding circumstances are different.

The question to which every pre-schooler wants the answer. Will this fit in here?

There's a song in one of my favorite musicals that has a verse that goes:
Why did the kids put beans in their ears?
No one can hear with beans in their ears.
After awhile the reason appears,
They did it 'cause we said, “No.”

This morning we were having peas for a snack and Eli started putting them in his nose. I asked him not to. I was doing dishes, admittedly, not paying that much attention. All of a sudden Eli was freaking out a little and he said he had a pea stuck in his nose. I looked: no pea. I told him he must have gotten it out already, but he kept insisting there was a pea stuck in his nose. Upon further inspection, there was in fact a pea lodged very deep in his nose. Tweezers seemed like a good implement with which to remove the pea, but I was a little worried about jamming it further in instead of pulling it out. So I tried another tactic. I held the opposite side of his nose and had him blow as hard as he could. Out flew the pea; crisis averted.

Summer Vacation

Things have been busy at home and work. A few weeks ago when things were less busy we went on a vacation to the UP. We split our time between a canoe trip and visiting family.


Phase 1: Big Island Lake Wilderness Area
I had come upon this area while looking for places not too far to go on a canoe trip. We were looking for somewhere that we didn't need to reserve sites months in advance and we could canoe at/to. We were looking at a 3 day 2 night trip. Portages are a good and bad thing; they keep people out but too many makes hauling the kids a pain. Since Eli has never pooped in the woods I was hesitant to take a 2 3/4 year old someplace without thunderboxes, so places without designated sites were out. BILW fit the bill perfectly. It lies between Manistique and Munising and is designated a wilderness area inside of the Hiawatha National Forest. A plus: it was free. No permits or parking passes, just fill out a card with your name, car info, and emergency contact and put it in the dropbox. We drove up Tuesday night after work to steal a day in and stayed in St. Ignace. That put us just a few hours from BILW. After almost 10 miles of National Forest dirt roads we came to the parking area that was much easier to find then expected. There were only a few cars there which was a good sign. Some of those were day use people (locals?) who drag a kayak down or stash a cheap canoe at the end of the first portage. After a snack we carried the packs, canoe, and Amelia up and headed to the lake. It was only about 1200 feet and we were on the water. We talked to someone who had been there once before and got a tip for a good campsite on Townline lake where the kids could swim. We headed that way, three lakes and two more portages away. We got to swim (it was in the upper 80's, hot for the UP) and explore, pick blueberries and have a few (Eli-sized) adventures. It is a great place for shorter trips.

Phase 2: Marquette, MI
BILW was only about 1.5 hours from Marquette. We got there and met two of Bridgit's brothers for a late lunch and some grocery shopping. We went to the hotel to shower and change and headed back Dan & Betsy's. That night we went up the coast and for a fire, smores, stargazing,wine, and swimming on the beach (yes, Eli is still talking about that campfire). The next morning we had breakfast and then went to the farmers market. There we were surprised with Bridgit's cousin Sara. She came down from Houghton to join us for the day. We had a picnic lunch at the park and then went to Black Rocks(That isn't us, just some random youtube video) for some cliff jumping. The 67 degree water made the 90 degree heat feel way better. Then we went to another beach, and then back to Dan and Betsy's for some ice cream before taking Eric to the Airport and going out for Thai food. Dan and Betsy followed us to the hotel and the kids fell asleep on the way (as planned). We put them down in the room and us adults went to the hot tub and then hung out for a bit. It was a great day. The next day we had breakfast and then headed back south. We stopped and checked out the Fr. Marquette memorial in St. Ignace, the past couple times it has been closed. Eli loves to see “Rich's (Betsy's Father) windmills ” and the bridge. Then we headed the rest of the way home. All in all it was a great vacation. It turns out 5 days is the perfect amount of time for an almost 3 year old to be away from home.

Whip It

There have been a few movies shot in our area recently. The first is Whip It. They did some filming down the street. The trailer has hit the tubes, and the movie comes in October.

Check out 1:22 on the trailer. That is about a block away from us.

The Garden(s) this year

Once again we have expanded our garden this year. More room for veggies was the goal. We also plant some foods and herbs intermixed with our flowers and bushes though. Last summer we were expecting a baby mid-summer so we didn't do too much. We stuck with tomatoes, cauliflower, peppers, greens/kale, and various herbs. This year we are adding eggplant, peas, bush beans, cucumber, cabbage, and more greens/kale. We also have added a huge garden at my parents house. We have a huge plot to add pole beans, carrots, beets, melons, squashes to the overflow herbs, tomatoes, eggplants, cucumbers, bush beans, and greens.

I am thinking about doing a rainwater collection system combined with a soaker hose setup to water the veggies. I have been looking online and some of DIY systems look pretty cool. I really should get on this before the summer drought gets going.

Gardening and Living in the City

Each year we have lived in out house we have expanded the garden. Today is a wonderful day and we have been working outside since church: mowing the grass and planting seedlings into egg-cartons. Mowing the grass is like driving to work. You are left to your thoughts, the whir of the blades drowns out everything else and I was thinking about yard work and gardening when I was growing up.

Having a yard in the city is really different. Weed whacking only happened a couple times a year when there was going to be a party, now I feel bad when there is some tall grass around a tree. In the country nobody cared about dandelions. They were a fact of life, and nobody cared about how they looked, or how to get rid of them. Who is crazy enough to try to get rid of 3 acres of them? I just spend 4 hours mowing them along with the “grass.” Now I have a city yard and I spend time digging the “evil” dandelions out. In the country “grass” was any green thing that wasn't in the flower beds and smaller then a tree. If it was in a flower bed then it was classified as a “weed”.

On the subject of weeding, it is one of the things I remember spending most of my summers doing. We had all sorts of good home grown food: corn, carrots, peas, tomatoes, and more. At the time I didn't care. Us kids hated working in the garden. It was a chore that we avoided and when we did something bad we were punished by pulling weeds in the garden. A garden that is roughly the same size as the yard I now own. Maybe that is why they had five kids? Now I stare at that garden as I get ready to plant more vegetables in it. We don't have room for everything we want to plant so we are going to have an annex garden at my parents.

For a long time that garden wasn't used. It went along with other things that we did when I was young that dropped by the wayside. The garden laborers got busier and started to leave the house and there wasn't time for the garden. It's hard to remember that we used to be members of a food co-op and had closets full of canned food. They were replaced with Meijer and then Costco, but in recent years my folks have started to get back into gardening. I can't help but wonder if we will stop doing those things when the kids get older.

For now Eli loves the garden. He plays with the rakes, hoes, and shovels. Whenever we drive in or out of the driveway he screams “I can see the peas!” I am sure that will change when he becomes a teenager, but who knows.

Munchkins and Music

Almost every time we go to church Eli makes a comment about wanting to go to Pease auditorium (EMU's lovely performance venue which is is across the parking lot). We've been to a couple of concerts there, and Eli has really enjoyed them (and you can't beat the price). So when we got to church on Sunday we got to tell him that we were in fact going there later today! Eli spent the next several hours fixated on going to “Uncle Nate's” concert at Pease Auditorium. (Side note, he says auditorium really funny, but I can't even say it the way he does, let alone type it.) We settled into our seats and Amelia was immediately in Grandpa's lap (he was sitting behind us with Grandma and Aunt Catherine). The Alumni Band began the concert and Amelia fairly flew off his lap. At first I thought she was trying to get to me, but then I noticed her eyes were glued on the stage. If desire was a mode of transportation, she would have been on the stage a moment after the performance began. Eli, too, sat rapt, enjoying every note. Amelia was so delighted she started cooing. Loudly. Loudly enough that Nate asked us later if she had been making noise during the first piece. We gave her a passie, but that doesn't really keep her quiet when she's happy. Mostly the passie just ended up on the floor… As you can guess, the entrancement did not last, but eventually Amelia nursed to sleep, and Eli was able to run around the lobby as a new group set up. He did really well for about 2/3s of the 2 hour concert. About half way into the final third, I busted out the snacks and gave him peas (yes, peas in Pease) 1 at a time. It worked. We got to see (almost) the whole performance. The music was great, but watching the total enchantment of our children was, well, priceless.

Accidents of all sorts

The other day I was in the car with the two kids after having picked them up from day care. I was talking with Eli about how we wear out seat belts so we don't fly out of the car if we get in an accident. The next thing I hear from him is something about pee in your pants and fly out of the car. He took “accident” as a peeing your pants kind of accident. So I then had to convince him that there are different kinds of accidents.

I can just imagine him thinking that he would pee his pants and then be ejected from the car if he wasn't wearing his seat belt.

Spring Time

As the weather warms the grownups in our house are craving baby lettuces a fresh peas. Unfortunately for us, the ground won't yield such treasures for some time. We did plant our peas, lettuce, spinach and kale today, and I personally am dreaming of a wilted baby spinach salad and maybe some lovely lemon cookies for dessert. That dream will have to wait at least until Easter.
We're forever trying to get our kids to enjoy their veggies. Today Eli planted the peas in the little holes we made for them. He also helped with the greens, but their seeds are so small it can be difficult for little hands. In any case, he seems a lot more excited about spinach and kale than ever before and we're all plotting how to enjoy and savor the fruits of the forthcoming season!

The Riddle of the Compass

I heard an interview with the author a while back on NPR. The book had some interesting bits in it. The author tried to make it exciting and put too much story into it. I enjoyed the history of the compass and how navigation changed as a result. Also cool was how that navigation was then applied to discovery. I was really impressed that the ancient Chinese who used the compass as a diving tool knew about declination. The compass had to travel to the Mediterranean though to find use for navigation.

The Riddle of the Compass

I also found this way cool chart showing the variation of declination over time (1590-1990).