Sunday, July 27, 2008

Where's a bat when you need one??


We traveled to Assateague National Seashore over the weekend. It was our first official family camping trip. All the stars aligned to make this a wonderful experience. The weather was fantastic. The camp site was amazing (thanks Ed!!) --essentially oceanfront. The wild ponies visited us often and were very polite. Even Bambi wanted to meet us but Mom wouldn't allow this until after he finished his breakfast. As a concession, she allowed us to watch from about 6 feet away which was very exciting for the girls. We had a beautiful beach to ourselves and we attended a park service program on crabbing so the girls got to try that out for awhile too.

And when all this nature got dull and the crabs weren't biting, we piled into the car and headed to the OC boardwalk for a quick dose of high intensity commercialism.

We are still working out the kinks on the restful night sleep and though the cold shower was teeth-grindingly refreshing, a warm shower would have been nice. And, I have to admit, I was missing that crazy bat as I swatted away the mosquitoes. All in all I give it two thumbs up. :)

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Our budding artist...

If you participated in the Barnyard BBQ of 2002, give yourself a pat on the back!!


Surrounding Lauren with art at an early age has paid off....

I was browsing through the Washington Post today and came across my daughter's name! She entered a logo contest a few months back and apparently she was the runner-up. We were never notified so you can imagine my surprise at seeing the news in the paper. We were all very excited and now her entry can be seen on the Special Olympics Bus Pull page...
http://www.dullesday.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=74&Itemid=119

Lauren's entry has an "Honorable Mention" stamp.

Here's the newspaper article...
http://loudounextra.washingtonpost.com/news/2008/jul/24/loudoun-news-briefs/?local

Congrats Lauren!

Friday, July 18, 2008

Goin' Batty...


I like bats...theoretically. I know they eat tons of mosquitoes - that sounds good to me. But, when I find myself face to face with a real live bat, my heart rate quickens, I start making weird high pitch "G" noises and I bust out in a cold sweat. My first encounter occurred at age 14. I was trapped in a high school gymnasium with the exit blocked by a bat as it flip-flopped and fluttered around on the floor like a fish moving in my direction. I shrank behind a water fountain as it got closer and closer. I think someone eventually came to my rescue and chased the bat away with a baton or something.

Yesterday evening was another such encounter. I was walking the dogs when suddenly a creature flew up from the ground to about chest level approximately 2 feet from my face. Unfortunately, it was semi-trapped between me, the two leashes and the two dogs. It just kept bobbing around between my feet and chest. I pulled very hard on the dogs leashes to flee the scene but the dogs were totally not on board with my plan. After being jerked backward they started to fight with each other and further tangle the leashes and drag me back toward the crazy bat (which I had begun to believe was not all together well)

You may have noticed the Astro Escape-O-Meter has been incremented by one. You might think I weighed the options of getting bit by a rabid bat versus chasing Astro around the neighborhood and then giving him a bath.

You would be giving me too much credit.

I gripped hard on those leashes and dragged 120 lbs of canine with all my might until finally the bat moved on.

So why did I up the escape-o-meter?
Astro escaped the day before when the girls opened the door to greet a friend and the friend had opened the screen door to greet the girls. Astro saw his opening and headed for the hills. Bill recaptured him in under 5 minutes. I guess Astro was having a "senior moment".

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

The dirtiest week of my life...


Muddy Buddy Richmond 2008 --photo by brightroom.com.

This past week I definitely earned my "Earth Mother" nickname.
I finished the week teamed up with Bill at the Muddy Buddy race in Richmond. We had a great time mountain biking and running the 6 mile course and then slithering through the mud pit. We even had a decent finish time placing us almost in the middle of our age group. Special thanks to Grandma Linda for watching the girls and to our biggest fans...Steph, Casey, and Griffin for braving the sun, mud, traffic, and sweat to attempt to see us finish.

Earlier that week, I volunteered as a full time Unit co-leader for Camp Claude Moore. This was a week long, all-day girl scout camp held exclusively outdoors (rain or shine---and of course there was rain) The "plan" called for Kristen to join the Tag-a-longs unit and play blissfully all day with other volunteers' children who weren't old enough to join the other units. Lauren would be in a unit that I was not involved in leading. My unit leader would have everything under control and would just need support moving gear, setting things up, refilling the water jug, etc. She and I would take our eager campers to exciting centers and return 45 minutes later to help get the group to the next center. Ahhhh.

This is how it really went...
Shortly after dropping off my children at the area designated for volunteer's kids on the opposite end of the park, I joined my unit and forty minutes later we joined all the campers at morning flag. The first order of business at flag was the auctioning off of Lauren (and only Lauren) in front of the 300+ campers because her unit leader never came to claim her. Not the most auspicious start to the week. After flag we took our unit to a center and my unit leader, aka The Invisible Woman, asked if I would mind if she ran back to her car. This would be the first in a long line of requests to part company. Shortly after she disappeared, I heard over the the walkie talkie that Kristen was crying and the tag-a-long leader was trying to locate me. @$%#$%@#%#$!!! I tried in vain to communicate via the walkie-talkie and finally made the decision to run over and check on her. I handed over all the allergy medicines and Epi-pens for the unit to another adult on the scene and promised to return shortly. I sprinted about a half mile to the tag-a-long area to discover that Kristen had been moved to another area to talk to the "head honcho" of the camp. I continued my sprint to that area moving even further from my unit. I finally located her and was told that they were trying not to involve me and attempting to get it worked out. Well, TooOOooOOooo LATE!! Kristen and I negotiated a return to her unit which involved a frozen treat. Back I sprinted to my unit.
20 minutes later...repeat.
20 minutes later...repeat,
except that I decided to bring her back to my unit and she could be a REAL tag-a-long. I later discovered that she needed to go to the bathroom and no one was going to convince her to use the porta-potty. Once we located an acceptable spot in the woods, things improved markedly. Several of the campers in my unit LOVED carrying Kristen around and Kristen loved all the attention. I flicked two deer ticks off my leg, wiped the sweat from my brow, visited the hot and stinky porta-john and thought to myself...isn't this grand? Things were looking up.

The week continued and brought torrential downpours with no cover in sight, campers' parents coming 40 minutes after camp was over, multiple bug bites covering my limbs, complaining campers, center leaders chastising me for not having "control" of my unit, Kristen hanging all over me and refusing to cooperate, blah blah, blah. I capped off the week by thoroughly embarrassing myself performing the Cotton Eye Joe-Cupid Shuffle-Macarena-Electric Slide medley alongside my campers in front of all the parents. If you have no idea what I'm talking about...you need to spend some time with 5th and 6th grade girls.

I can't wait to sign up for next year.

Monday, July 7, 2008