Sunday, June 7, 2009

We went hiking on one of my favorite trails in Kettletown State Park yesterday.
This is the view from the first lookout.

We stopped to rest, drink water, nurse Avril, and have some homemade trail mix.

The trail went straight up that pile of rocks! Norah has a natural balance and grace that I only impede when I try to grab her hand and keep her "safe." Dwayne reminded me subtly that she is actually better off without holding my hand, since I am more likely to take her down with me if (or when) I fall. It's alarming to us how well she maneuvers trails like this one. She's like a little mountain goat!

This root looks just like a snake ready to strike.

These were breathtaking. They looked like little rainbows growing all over the fallen trunks.

They came in all sorts of colors. I want to find out what they are called.

Norah, checking out a fallen tree at the end of the trail.

My legs are pretty sore, this being the first full hike I've taken since I was pregnant and gave birth to Avril. But, Dwayne and I both agree that we'd rather take a hike any day than go to the gym!

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Norah gets to use the online learning program Time4Learning for one month in exchange for "an honest review on my blog."

So, in an exactly one month from today, expect an honest review.
(But, so far, it looks like Norah's honestly lovin' it!)

Friday, June 5, 2009

When we first moved into our house, I had mixed feelings about the tree out front. (I had mixed feelings about the periwinkle paint in the guest bedroom, too, but that was easy enough to change. I wasn't about to uproot a tree.) I loved the interesting twists of the tree's trunk and the perfect shade it provided for the yard, but I literally hated the leaves on it, since they were red first thing in the spring, when other trees' leaves were green. To me, our tree seem backward and it stuck out like a sore thumb. But, over the years, I've recorded how interesting this tree can be, how it changes, yet stays so beautiful through every season and I've grown to treasure it.

One expert told us our tree is a Japanese red maple and said it must be around seventy five years old, "a giant for its kind," since red maples grow so very slowly. I didn't know to believe him at first, but after he said that, I was deliberate to look for other red maples around town. I could find only what I thought had to be some type of popular red maple bush planted most everywhere else. I came to find out that the "bushes" were actually thriving red maple trees and they had not been planted recently, had been in the same spots for years already. So, fortunately for us, whoever built our house around fifty years ago must have known not to cut down our red maple, that it was a rarity, even back then.

If the color could be matched, the millions of tiny buds this tree drops in the spring would make the perfect shade of woman's lipstick; they're the deepest, most passionate mauve.


Later, in the summer, the bottoms of the leaves actually do try to turn green while the tops cling to a deep red, but somehow, in the right shade of light, those two colors will mix into a deep purple and blinding platinum. I am not even sure the most gifted artist on earth could make that happen with the same colors in paint. I know I haven't been able to capture the effect, even with my camera.

I look forward to fall. On clear, crisp days, the color can be so vivid it looks like the leaves are bursting into flames.


At least once a winter, during an ice storm, sickles will form on every single branch, every single little twig, no matter how small, bowing the branches with the weight of the ice and making it look like the crown of the tree is carved from precious crystal.


And, at other times in winter, when the snow is sticky, the flakes will pile on the branches and make the whole world look sort of like a black and white photograph.


And if the snow is gone and it has been cold enough long enough, the smooth bark takes on the appearance of skin and the branches coming up from the trunk look just like the armpits, bare shoulders and arms of a someone standing naked in the cold, with their hands stretch up to heaven. It is so graphic that I'll almost turn my head and blush; I can hardly believe how life-like it is.


And, even the green mold that shows up at the dull end of winter can look rich in beauty, like decoupage made from dollar bills.


There are few things in nature that have surprised me so much, that I have found as spectacular or have delighted in as often as our once thought to be "backwards" tree. No matter what the season, I never grow bored with its beauty and find myself celebrating its uniqueness.

Thursday, June 4, 2009


"Avril Marieee...yaaa!"

Sung to the tune of "Ava Maria." It's our 'lil theme song for her.

She's cooing, sucking her fists (when she can get them to her mouth) and smiling at us now.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009


Sometime before my first daughter Norah was born, my mother-in-law gave me an audio tape of songs she sang to one of my nieces when she was a baby. That same niece is going off to college this coming fall, proof that time passes all too quickly for us mothers.

I played the songs and sang along to the tape when Norah was a baby, then put it away once she stopped nursing. After digging for almost half an hour in my hope chest the other day, I found the tape again and I've been listening to it and singing the songs, this time to Avril. I told Norah I sang the same songs to her when she was a nursing infant, through tears, because I was so chocked up with memories... but she didn't remember and she took me on my first guilt trip over this.

Norah- "Why'd you stop singing the songs to me?"
Me- "Cause you got older."
Norah- "But. I could still hear them." (Rolling her eyes).
Me- "..." (Speechless).

Dwayne's mom simply marked the tape "Lullabies (Baby)." But after a quick search online, I found out that the album is called "A Child's Gift of Lullabies" and the singer is Tanya Goodman. I also discovered another album of hers called "The Rock-a-Bye Collection." So, I purchased all her songs from iTunes and plan to make a complete CD for myself, so I can listen to the songs through our larger sound system in the living room.

Singing doesn't come naturally to me, but these songs make it such a pleasure. It's like I am praying over my kids to music. It's hard to even pick a favorite, since I like them all, but right now, "Appalachian Lullaby" is the most fun to sing. The words go as follows:

Well I love my baby
sweet and fair
you've got the sky in your eye
the sun in your hair
I rock you to sleep most every night
and sing you this song
while I hold you tight

Sleep my baby
the angels keep you from harm
and your father above
cradles you in his love
safe and warm
sleep my baby
nestled in your mama's arms
sleep my baby
the angels keep you from harm

My baby
you'll be sleepin' soon
kissed by the golden stars and moon
I have just one wish for you
may your every dream come true


Sleep my baby
the angels keep you from harm
and your father above
cradles you in his love
safe and warm
sleep my baby
nestled in your mama's arms
sleep my baby
the angels keep you from harm

And, of course, I promised Norah I'd start singing this and all the other songs to her again, too. And, she wants to learn the words and help me sing them to Avril.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Who needs brushes?!

Norah used some summer time toys to create a masterpiece without paint brushes.
The lizard made the coolest swirl and dot design.


Monday, June 1, 2009


Sunday afternoon in our front yard, sitting under the perfect tree, a warm breeze blowing, neighbors walking by, waiting on the ice cream truck, still waiting, waiting some more... "It never comes when you have your money ready," reading the Twilight books, wild flowers for book marks, macaroni salad, veggies with dip, a silly toy from Grandma, sidewalk chalk, Norah's own version of hop scotch, Jonah and the whale, bug collecting, the neighbor's cat, naps in the shade and kisses all around!

Front Doors

Our upcoming church art show is about "Proclaiming" the Gospel.  I'm thinking a lot about our parental responsibility to ...