Friday, October 31, 2008

Happy Halloween from Hogwarts


More to come later, I'm sure....

And here ya go, from the trick-or-treating...

Harry with Hogwarts staff


O and friends Commander Cody & Eve (from Wall-E)

And the post-trick-or-treat, post-neighborhood Halloween party, way-past-bedtime piggyback ride home...
Who loves Halloween? These guys!!!

Monday, October 27, 2008

I'm Barack Obama, and I approve this absence!

Well, way back at the beginning of the presidential campaign, I promised O that we'd go hear his candidate, Barack Obama, before election day. AND TODAY WAS OUR DAY! Here's the story...


I got an email Saturday evening that Sen. Obama would be appearing this morning in Canton. Inside. In a theater. With real seats. Yeah! So, we flew down to Canton right that minute to pick up tickets, just making it to the campaign office before they closed at 8pm. We were literally running down the sidewalk in downtown Canton to make it in time--P sick with a sinus infection, O dressed as Harry Potter because we'd just picked him up from a Halloween party, and me on an amazing adrenaline high! I'm sure we scared all the nice campaign volunteers, but oh well.... we got our tickets! On the way down we'd called the Hursts from our Obamamobile to see if they'd like to come with us for the event, and of course they were in. I figure this kind of history lesson is better than anything the boys would have learned at school today, right?

So this morning O got to come to school with me for awhile because Jeff had to go in to take a science test. O read stories at circle time and helped me help the kids scoop out our class pumpkin. Fun! Then we picked up Jill and went to pick up Jeff from school. Oh, did I mention this was when it started snowing?!?

The doors opened for the event at 10:30 am, which was about an hour before we got in the very long, cold line to wait to get in the building. Things moved much faster than when we went to see Hillary, though, and within 40 minutes or so we were through security. Then we followed the flow of the crowd to our very-far-from-the-stage seats. But at least there were seats!!


There were a few warm-up speakers, most notably John Boccieri (trying to be the first Democrat to represent the 16th district since 1948). Followed by some chanting & a "wave" that took awhile to get going, but ended strong. Yeah for us! Then after a long, dramatic, fifteen minute pause, out came the next president of the United States...

It was a great speech, and longer than I had anticipated. The media was billing it as his "closing arguments" on the campaign, and it lived up to the billing. He covered pretty much everything, in his smooth, elegant style, punctuated by long rounds of applause. It was one of those experiences that's hard to encapsulate, which is not good for a blogger! Suffice it to say that it was all I'd hoped to hear, all I'd hoped O would hear, and what I think we need to hear as a country. Yes, We Can!!
We stuck around awhile afterwards to bask in the glow and check out the press corps. We got interviewed for NewsRadio AM 1480, but I'm sure you all heard that fine piece of journalism already, right?

We also met a very nice Secret Service agent who gave the boys some pins that he produced out of thin air. Seriously, neither Jill nor I could figure out where he got them from! Anyways, it was a long, politically charged day, and an amazing experience for the boys. They will never forget the day their super-cool moms let them skip school to go see history in action.... and that's because we'll never let them forget!!

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Cub Scout Family Campout

Okay, well here is my first ever blog. This is P, often referred to but rarely heard from. I would like to share our weekend adventure.

O and I went on the Cub Scout Family Campout at Camp Manatoc in Peninsula, OH. The weather was supposed to be sunny and mid- to high-50’s. We arrived early Saturday morning, around 8:45a, to find the brave campers who stayed Friday night enjoying some camp breakfast (hash browns, eggs in bag, bacon, coffee and hot chocolate). Since we had already eaten, we skipped the opportunity to feast on some fine campfire cuisine. Around 9:15a, we hooked up with O’s old den and walked over to see the “Jamboree on the Air” ham station setup at one of the pavilions. The guy talked for about 45 minutes while the kids asked great questions like “when can we talk to someone” and “if you get too close to the antenna, can you feel the radio waves?” After running out of patience for a non-alien voice to appear over the 40M band, we hiked on to the obstacle course. O scaled the climbing wall and then ran over to the balance beam. He fell off once, but then made it all the way across!


Temp 50-ish. We hiked back to camp around 11:30a for our foil pack lunch. Adult leaders were thawing hamburgers over the open fire that could be combined with some of the frozen vegetables in the pack and cooked. I was thinking about a hamburger until someone inquired as to the whereabouts of a family who had attended last year. Another adult responded that after the extreme intestinal disorder the entire family experienced last year, they were not coming this year. Needless to say, O had the frozen veggies with some butter in his foil pack and I had two pre-cooked hot dogs in mine.

Temp still 50-ish, maybe a little colder in the shade. After lunch, we met up with O’s den and completed the Map & Compass belt loop. One of the dads is a pilot and was happy to share his knowledge. After much running around, we packed our hiking gear around 2:15p to begin bearing 140⁰ SE to the rifle range. Things were a bit backlogged, so we hiked over to a quarry and the scouts ran around for another 20 minutes or so. We hiked back to the range where each scout got to shoot a Daisy pump-action, single shot BB gun. O did really well, hitting a ping-pong ball three times, a soda can once, and the paper target three times. (Takes after his championship marksman Granddad.) I think I once hit a wooden clothespin with a BB from about 15yards away back home in the Nati…

Temp is now in the 40s. After the BB range, we went back to camp, ran around and then prepared for the spaghetti dinner that was going to be served by the Girl Scouts who camped with us. They boiled mass quantities of spaghetti in zip-loc bags, made some meat sauce and garlic bread, and put together a salad (from bags, not from nature). By the time we walked from the serving table to the eating area around the campfire, dinner was cold. O choked down most of his, I ate the rest, and then tried to get a warm plate of my own. Again, cold by the time I sat down.

Temp is still in the 40s, but getting colder. After eating, the kids ran around again and then around 6pm we lined up for our tickets to the Haunted Hayride at Camp Butler. We carpooled with O’s friend Alex and his dad (who works for P’s company’s primary competitor) and got in line for the hayride. Another dad sought out a hayride worked and asked about the start time for the rides. He was told, very specifically, that the rides would begin at the exact hour of dark o’clock. Well, on this day, dark o’clock occurred around 8pm. While we waited, the scouts ran around eating donuts and spraying each other with silly string. The hayride was fun, not too scary because of the extreme age range for the kids. We left Camp Butler and headed back to Camp Manatoc in the pitch black night.

By now it was probably in the 30’s and dark. Not city dark, but country, campground, kind of scary dark. O was exhausted, as was I, and did not seem very excited about the dump cake dessert (cake mix, pie filling and 7-up). He asked to go to bed, and I agreed. We crawled into the sleeping bags and O fell asleep almost instantly. We wore thermal undies, sweatpants, socks, t-shirts, sweatshirts, and knit caps. Throughout the night, we heard coyotes, people, raccoons, and lions and tigers and bears, oh my. Okay, maybe not the lions and tigers, but there was something making a nice scratching noise right outside our tent.

When we awoke, the temp had to be below 30. There was frost everywhere, but all that was cold was my little nose that had no protection. We had made it through the night, and went out to see what everyone else was doing. There was a healthy mix of campers who were prepared for the cold and those who were not. I felt bad for the people who were cold, because it was really, really cold. We packed everything up and came home around 9:30a. Around the fire in the morning, some of the Webelos dads were talking about their winter campout in January called Klondikes. Personally, I will need some serious practice to be ready for camping in January. Thankfully, I have a couple of years to prepare. All in all, it was fun to be in the wild with O and do the scouting activities.

The Top 4 Things about Family Campout
4. Gettin’ jiggy with nature – raccoons and other wildlife, inches from my head making squeaky and scratchy noises, outside the tent looking for food and such to feast on for the evening.
3. The amazing acoustical dynamics of the campsite – snoring from tents 100 yards away that could be heard everywhere around the site.
2. Authentic camp food – like hot chocolate, Entenmann’s donuts, cereal in the mini box with milk from a gallon jug, and frozen broccoli/carrots/peas. Compared to the stuff that Survivorman Les Stroud eats (ants, plant leaves, tree bark, crayfish, and other natural delicacies), I guess we did not have it too bad.
And….

1. Spending 25 quality hours with O, doing new stuff!

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Where does the time go?

Obviously the time has not gone to blogging! So here's where it's gone lately, or at least where it's gone when my camera's been handy....

Applepicking with good friends

On the hayride out to the apple orchard

To Saturday morning soccer games (and Wednesday night practices). The big news here is that O, who happily plays defense about 90% of the time, scored a goal!!

To a super-fun birthday party!

To Pioneers in the Park. Yes, that's a real tomahawk!!


And on a Stagecoach ride with our buddies the Hursts.
Lesson learned, the stagecoach is a smelly ride!

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Another brush with fame!

This past Wednesday night we joined about 500 other kids and their parents at our local Barnes & Noble to meet Mary Pope Osborne. Those of you without elementary school-aged kids most likely have no idea who she is, and thus are wondering why so many people would show up to meet her. Big fans like O, however, know her well as the author of the Magic Tree House book series. This is a favorite in our house because the main characters travel back in time to meet various historical figures via the books they find in the aforementioned Magic Tree House. You can see why the history buff would *heart* her books!

As for the event, we were maybe 100 people back in line, and we got to wait in the cookbook aisle. After staring at the titles of all the cake & cookie books for an hour or so, we were pretty hungry by the time the line started moving! My personal favorite was the Ultimate Peanut Butter book, which gave me lots of ideas even though I already firmly believe in putting peanut butter on everything. But I digress...

Our neighbor friends Maggie & Gracie were right around the corner from us in line, so we got to hang with them while we waited, and that made the hour+ go pretty quickly!

Here's the gang with their new books and then O with Mary Pope Osborne and her husband Will. Unfortunately because of the ginormous turnout they couldn't pose for pictures, but you can tell from O's smile how very exciting it was to meet them!