Wednesday, December 24, 2008

London feeds geese!


Today Mimi and Papa took London to a little lake near the library to feed the ducks and geese. We took some stale Cheerios and old bread, and London had a ball feeding all the birds.


London and Mimi and Papa were mobbed by dozens and dozens of hungry, honking waterfowl.


As we started to run low on munchies, most of the birds departed for greener pastures: the two guys in the background who showed up with some food of their own.


Our holdouts were a mob of big fat geese, who came after London and Mimi for the last breadcrumbs. One of them bit Mimi's finger, but fortunately Mimi had a glove on so it didn't hurt. They backed London up right against the tree, but as we were driving away I asked London what his favorite bird was and he said, "The one that chased me!"



London ran all the way around the lake. I walked, and took pictures.


London has been plagued by croup since he was a baby. He had a respiratory evaluation this summer and we learned that he has a narrow windpipe. Every night before bed he gets 9 minutes of steroid aerosol through a nebulizer mask. His mask is shaped like a fish, so he calls it doing his "fish face". Vicki and I use it as time to read him books before bedtime, and so does Papa.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Presents for London--and a big one for Daddy


On Saturday morning we had a little Christmas celebration in Claremont. We read the Christmas story, sang the only two carols London knows ("We Wish You a Merry Christmas" and "Jingle Bells"), and opened the gifts that the three of us had gotten for each other. London passed out the packages.


His first Christmas presents were a Transformer and a package of five little die-cast jet planes. He brought the little jets on the plane when we flew to Oklahoma City that afternoon.


Yesterday we went to church with Mimi, Papa, Aunt Sarah, Uncle Dan, and "my cousins Abby and Caty". As in, "Do you think that my cousins Abby and Caty will wait for us?" and "I want to go with my cousins Abby and Caty!"


Then we went back to Mimi's and Papa's house, where London's Great-Grandma Onie and Great-Grandpa Bud celebrated Christmas with us. If I tried to list all the stuff London got, I'd probably crash the internet. His biggest present was this Thomas the Tank Engine toy laptop, but his favorite in time invested in play is a battery-powered Thomas train that he has been chasing across one floor or another for most of the past 24 hours.

Last night London went to spend the night with "my cousins Abby and Caty" in Glenpool. It was only his second night away from both Vicki and me. He handled it like a champ; honestly, he played so hard with his cousins that I don't think he had time to miss us very much. We had time to miss him, though.


Since Vicki and I had the today off from parenting, we drove down to Norman, met Todd and Anna Ruth for lunch, and then went to the Oklahoma Museum of Natural History. The entrance gallery to the Hall of Ancient Life is under renovation and set to reopen in March. We went to see the reconstructed head and neck of Sauroposeidon--all 39 feet of it--which was mounted the first week of December. Most of it is still behind the barriers, but also above the barriers, so you can get some idea of what it will look like when the gallery reopens:


This is something that I've been dreaming of seeing for more than a decade, so it was a pretty great day.

Stay tuned--lots more Christmas to come!

Christmas in Claremont


Last week London made Christmas sugar cookies for the program at his preschool. We don't have a rolling pin, so we flattened the dough under a piece of wax paper. Worked just fine.


At the Christmas program he and his classmates made bracelets...



...wore reindeer hats...


...and ate pizza.


Then, as the light of the setting sun painted the snow-clad slopes of Mount Baldy...


...he slept, and dreamed of Christmas morning.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

London at church


The fountain outside our parish hall. There are goldfish in the pool and we always stop and look every Sunday. London looked very sharp today in a dress shirt from Mimi.

Sunday, December 07, 2008

Christmas season


Although London loves his new Legos, he still likes to build with his Duplo blocks. The other day he told me he was building a castle. When he was done I told him it was a very nice castle, but he said, "It's not a castle. It's a church!"


We have two weekly rituals. One is Friday Night Fish Stick Picnic. The other is watching America's Funniest Videos on Sunday nights, or as London calls it, "the funny doggy show." It always makes London laugh out loud.


London normally speaks without a noticeable accent, but somehow he figured out how to do a Southuhn drawl. Out of the blue a few months ago he started folding himself in half and saying, "Yuh see mah bahttum?" There is no predicting when this is going to happen, and sometimes he goes weeks without doing it. So it's always a surprise, and never follows what's been going on, which makes it funnier. We usually crack up and say, "Yes, we see your bottom, Silly Man!" Which makes him fold in half again and shout, "YUH SEE MAH BAHTTUM!?" This usually goes for a few cycles until we're all helpless with laughter.


Last weekend we set up our Nativity. It's the first we've ever had.


We've been reading about the first Christmas for London's bedtime Bible story. He knows the story by heart and he thinks it's very sweet that baby Jesus was born in a manger.


Last night we set up our Christmas tree. Mom and Dad sent a box of ornaments from when I was a kid. London had fun hanging bulbs.


This is maybe my favorite picture of Vicki and London, certainly my favorite since London was a newborn. Merry Christmas to you all!

Saturday, December 06, 2008

Old bones and new words


I spent the two weeks before Thanksgiving in Germany, looking at dinosaurs. Here I am with the skull of Brachiosaurus...it may have been one of the most graceful and majestic of all God's creatures, but it had a face not even a mother could love.


Mike Taylor was there, too. Here we are sporting our super-awesome orange dinosaur t-shirts and goofing off with a fiberglass cast of an Apatosaurus thighbone. This was in Bonn, where we attended a workshop on the biology of long-necked sauropod dinosaurs.


The highlight of the trip was working in the Humbolt Museum in Berlin. Here I am up on a ladder looking at their Brachiosaurus. They have almost the entire skeleton in real bone, and most of the real bones are up in the mount, except for the neck and back vertebrae which are too heavy and too fragile to put up so high. Those are replaced with fiberglass casts, and the real bones are safe down in the basement. The same company that mounted this beast is putting up the Sauroposeidon neck and head at the museum in Norman...can't wait to see that.

But I know you are just drumming your fingers until I get to some London pix, so I won't punish you any further.


Today London and I visited the Raymond Alf Museum here in Claremont. The Alf Museum is unique in all the world as the only accredited museum run by a high school. It is on the campus of the Webb school, which is a residential school just up the hill. The museum has more kid-friendly exhibits and activities than many larger museums, including the best stocked table of real fossils for touching that I've ever seen. London had a blast. Here he is with the hind leg of Camarasaurus, which is actually not very big as sauropods go. Look at the size of the foot, that'll be important in a minute.


Here's London with Centrosaurus, one of the horned dinosaurs. There are dozens of species of these and even I have a hard time keeping them all straight. Triceratops, Pentaceratops, Anchiceratops, Arrhinoceratops, Montanaceratops...London just calls them all "ceratops dinosaurs".


Here's London in the hind footprint of a really big sauropod. This track is from north Texas, from the same formation as Sauroposeidon, and it's about the right size to be Sauroposeidon, so...who knows. Compare the size of this foot to the one London is standing next to in the photo above. Scary, huh?

LONDON'S WORDS

Lots of new stuff this time...

The other day London and Mumpa were out walking and London saw a patapillar. Another bug that he saw was a tweedle beetle, which he knows from Dr. Suess's Fox in Socks.

They also saw a stretch limo and London shouted, "Look, Momma! It's a weiner car!"

London has tried soda but he doesn't like it. I think the fizz freaks him out. And I've basically given up soft drinks in favor of tea, so the only person London sees ordering soda is Mumpa. This has given him some strange ideas. The other day we were walking into Target, just him and me, and he asked, "Why do girls like soda?" That was a tricky one to answer. A couple of days later he told Vicki, "When I turn into a girl, I will like soda." It reminded me of when Ryan was London's age; he would tell stories that began, "When I was big and you were little..."

He's also learned just enough about some things to be safe but not enough to be socially acceptable. Vicki and London were at the mall and London pointed at a man and his two friends and shouted, "He is a stranger! Those two men are strangers!"

London knows the words 'foot' and 'feet' but usually we call them 'fooses' just to be goofy. When I am putting his socks on I will say, "Give me a little foose," and he'll stick out a foot. Then I ask for "another little foose" to get the other foot. The other day, though, when I said that he said, "It's not a little foose. It's a big foose." I put my foot up next to his and said, "Now that's a big foose. So what is yours?" He said, "It's a little big foose."

Ryan and Courtney sent a lightsaber for London's fourth birthday. Since he already has Anakin Skywalker's lightsaber, this new one is "Obi Wan's Kenobi's wight saber."

London loves building with his Duplo and Lego blocks. "I maded it," he says.

London gained the ability to use the toilet before he got the inclination. To motivate him Vicki and I 'race' him to the potty; these are races we deliberately let him win. Even now if he is reluctant go (say, just before we leave for a long car ride) we can con him into going by saying, "I'm gonna win!" and dashing toward the bathroom. That will get him to instantly stop whatever he is doing and run to get there first. He doesn't know the word 'beat' yet, so after he wins he says, "I winned! I winned you, Daddy!" Once in a while, though, one of us accidentally wins a race we didn't even know was going on, just in the course of going to the bathroom. When we come out we get an accusing look. "You doed it before me!"

The story of "Yuh see mah bahttum?" will have to be told another time. Also in upcoming posts: pictures from Grandma and Grandpa's visit, and London setting up our nativity and decorating the Christmas tree. Stay tuned!