Saturday, December 25, 2010

LEGO Race Stop Motion


I received the LEGO Race 3000 game for Christmas. Once I built the game board it was just asking to be animated with stop motion. In the process I learned how to add layered sound tracks in iMovie. I think I'll keep my day job for a little while longer, though.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Charlotte's Pre-school Christmas Carols


Charlotte's Pre-K class performed carols for parents and friends today. I'm on vacation all week so both Carol and I were able to attend. The kids were all adorable, as usual. Enjoy.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

First Snow of 2010/2011


We're at least a month late getting our first snow but it finally arrived last night. Audrey and Charlotte have been pining for it to come. We didn't get very much - only about 1.5 inches. After school today it was just right for rolling into big balls to make snow creatures. A little grassy due to the shallow depth but that didn't matter a bit to very excited girls.

Now they are on the sofa drinking hot cocoa.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

More Phone Microscopy


The little cheap microscope I had glued to an iPhone case (see previous photos) had come unglued a while back. I finally had a chance to fix it, so today we were on another microscopy quest. We started around the house, but then Audrey and I went out for a winter walk in the woods and shot some interesting things. The images aren't all that great, but it gets a lot of oohs and ahhs from the girls and that's the whole point.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Three Busy Girls Today

Pretty nice to come home from work to homemade treats!

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Charlotte Turns Five


Charlotte turned five last weekend. It's very hard to believe that we have 5 and 6 year olds! And Audrey will turn 7 in two months.

Charlotte was very excited for about two weeks before her birthday. She would go to our big wall calendar at least once a day and count the days remaining. She told us many times exactly what kind of party she wanted, what kind of cake, what she wanted for breakfast and of course what presents she wanted. Of course both she and Audrey "want" everything they see in newspaper ads, on TV commercials and in the stores.

Birthday breakfast was specified with great precision. Mickey mouse pancakes with a chocolate mouth, a chocolate nose and chocolate eyes. Audrey added whipped cream to her specification. After pancakes we opened family presents like a little Christmas morning. Later in the day we all went to the theater to see Tangled, the new Disney animated feature based on Rapunzel.

Charlotte's birthday party was the day after her birthday. She invited all girls including classmates from last year and this year plus neighbor Anna and even sister Audrey (Charlotte put Audrey on the list). Carol made cupcakes to Charlotte's specifications (originally it was supposed to be a princess cake but Charlotte changed her mind). After a snack they got to eat cupcakes, and then after gifts they went back to the table and decorated Chinese takeout boxes and then a cupcake each to take home in their box. Everyone had a great time.

Charlotte is enjoying being 5.

Click the small picture above for photos and the larger picture below for video.



Click for Birthday Video

Thursday, December 2, 2010

The Good Mother

I have to point out what a great mom Carol is. We often get into a phase where some aspect of parenting isn't going like we want it to. We'll feel lost for a short bit and Carol's brain will be working the problem (unbeknownst to me). Then Viola! Carol comes up with a simple and elegant solution.

One recent example was our bedtime ritual. It had gotten a little sloppy over the summer, and even before that was taking longer than we wanted it to. Carol came up with a simple idea: an alarm clock that goes off at 8:00 and at that time stories are over and the girls have to be quiet in their beds. The girls know about the alarm, and if they choose to goof off brushing teeth or getting pajamas on then it costs them story time.

It works like a charm. At least for us. The girls often do goof off and sometimes end up with only 5 minutes for stories. Usually they do better than that. But they know and accept the routine.

After about a week we decided to move the alarm time to 7:30 because we wanted them to have the opportunity for more sleep.

Charlotte usually falls asleep around 8:00 now. Audrey, on the other hand, rarely falls asleep before 9:00. She stays quiet in her bed, but she'll look at books or draw pictures on her glow pad for quite a while. She'll sometimes call one of us up for a last hug and kiss. It's actually a favorite time of mine because I get to see the rare "calm Audrey".

Anyway, I just wanted to express my gratitude to Carol for being a wonderful mother. And for devising a system with the bonus of another hour alone with her in the evenings to be grown ups.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Ballet Lessons

In early November both girls finished their first 8-week session of ballet lessons at the Northeast School of Ballet. They seem to be enjoying it. At this school they do not have recitals. At the end of each 8-week session they have "Peek Week" where parents can watch the kids in a class setting demonstrating what they've learned (at normal classes parents aren't allowed).

I thought we had taken photos and video of both girls' classes but it turns out Audrey got the short shrift this time. This the best photo from the class, and the only good video was from Charlotte's class. Oh well, we'll do better next time.

Click on the photo to go to the video.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Audrey Art


Audrey drew/painted this picture with watercolor crayons last week at school. I love the colors.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Rockery Visit #3


On Sunday we headed back to the Ipswich River Audubon Sanctuary and its Rockery.

We played hide and seek a bunch on the Rockery and then we noticed people feeding birds. At one point I pointed to a nuthatch running down a tree trunk upside down and as soon as I pointed my finger a chickadee landed on it looking for food. He was followed by several colleagues. A few would actually try to peck my finger. A few minutes later a nuthatch landed on my hand, and after that even a shy titmouse.

Audrey was very excited to have a bird land on her hand and she was very patient. We scrounged up some fallen birdseed and had some luck with that. Later during our walk some strangers gave us some real seed and then Audrey had lots of birds land on her hand and Charlotte got one chickadee (the was enough for her).

This has quickly become a favorite place for all of us. The girls could play at the Rockery forever. And walking the trails through the marsh is wonderfully peaceful. The girls always resist leaving the Rockery to go for a walk, but they always end up loving the adventure and all the discoveries we make. This time saw lots of beaver evidence and the girls each collected a walking stick. We also identified the trees by the fallen leaves.

We're looking forward to another visit in the snow.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Maker Faire NYC 2010



In September Audrey and I attended Maker Faire in New York. You can read the original blog post for the details. I'm on a roll today and got the video I shot there edited into a movie.

Click on the image to go to the video.

Beautiful October


I've been enjoying the arrival of Fall with the cooler days and the color. I was going to rake leaves today but our trees still have about 25% of their leaves so instead I'm editing photos and videos. I'll rake next weekend.

It's very unusual for us to have a homebody weekend but we are having one now. The TV has been off all day and the girls are playing together very well. Carol is enjoying the peace.

On recent weekends we've had some good fun. We visited the Davis Mega Maze as a work social event. We spent 90 minutes in the maze, whereupon we stumbled upon the exit and decided we were done. But the girls went on to play with the big chess and checkers sets and on the bouncy obstacle course.

Two weeks ago we drove to New York for the weekend and visited my friend Bill, his girlfriend Sara and his kids Cole and Tatum. It had been a year since we saw them so it was nice to hang out. We all went to the New York Hall of Science together and the kids had a lot of fun.

We have a lot of forested "reservations" very near our house so I've taken the girls for walks. One of my favorite things about New England compared to Seattle is the distinctness of the seasons. And I especially love how different the forests look and feel in each of them. I wanted the girls to get steeped in the "fall woods" feeling.

Audrey yesterday wrapped up her first season playing soccer. She was on the Colts with Coach Joe. We had some good talks about what it means to play on a team. Audrey liked soccer and she'll play again in the Spring season.

The girls were really anticipating Halloween. They started counting down the days about two weeks prior. They had decided what they would be and remained pretty constant: Audrey wanted to be a cat and Charlotte wanted to be a vampire princess. Carol of course did a wonderful job with the costumes. When the day actually arrived the forecast was for chilly temps in the low 40s, so Carol ran to the fabric store and bought fleece and made capes for each of the girls. They can be used as blankets after Halloween.

One of Audrey's best friends from school, Aidan, came over with his family because their neighborhood doesn't have very good trick or treating. In our neighborhood it was fantastic. We covered both sides of four streets and the kids raked in the candy. The capes were perfect - Charlotte would not have lasted nearly as long without it.

Both girls love their schools. Carol and I both met with Audrey's teacher a couple of weeks ago and she's doing great (she gets bored in Math because it's "too easy" - just like her dad as a child). Carol met with Charlotte's teacher last week and all is going just fine there, too. Audrey is in the phase now where she can't help but try to read any words she sees. Charlotte is trying to emulate her big sister.

Summer/Fall 2010 Video Clips



With decent HD video cameras on our phones now, we shoot random little pieces of video all the time. Each clip isn't enough to make into its own standalone movie so I edited together a bunch of clips from the past few months just to get them "published". That's the only way they'll become "home movies".

Click on the image to go to the movie.

Storyland (August 2010)



Back in August we made our first visit to Storyland in Glen, NH. It's a childhood tradition in these parts and I'm sure we'll be back each summer as long as we're east coasters. You can read my original blog post about the trip.

I finally got around to editing our video from Storyland. Click on the image to view the result.

Seattle/Richland Summer Vacation Video


I finally got around to editing the video from our July visit to Seattle and Richland. I always find it hard to strike a balance between shooting the right kind of video to tell a good story (which requires establishing shots, for example) and just enjoying whatever it is we're doing. And when we are in Richland we are often so relaxed that we forget to take any pictures at all!

We had a wonderful time seeing our families and many friends while we were back. We're already looking forward to next summer's trip.

Click on the image to go to the video.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Science Friday


A while back I read this cool post on how to attach a $5 microscope to my phone and use the phone's camera to view and photograph stuff. I've been wanting a computer-attached microscope for Audrey and Charlotte for a long time - this fit the bill just fine.

I finally ordered the microscope last week and it came today. It took me about 3 minutes to get it set up and then the girls enthusiastically viewed everything we could think of. The photo gallery shows the best photographs they took.

At some point in the future I'll get them a real light microscope, but for now this works great.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

The Rockery


Regular readers may remember that over Labor Day weekend we visited the Ipswich River Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary, which includes The Rockery - a small mountain of boulders with paths and caves built by the former estate owner. The girls have been asking to go back ever since. Yesterday we returned.

We had no schedule so the girls were able to play at the Rockery as long as they wanted. They really enjoy climbing around on the paths and through the grotto. Audrey likes to go off-trail and climb the steepest way, of course. She is her father's daughter.

The weather was gorgeous - mid-60s and sunny. The trees are just starting to turn and the forest and ponds look magical. I was very content.

This visit we wandered around on some of the other trails in the sanctuary. We found the old stone bridge under which is lots of pond scum. Audrey and Charlotte discovered that if you throw a stone into it, you make a hole in the algae but that it quickly closes up again. They proved that to themselves via repeated experimentation.

The Rockery is going to be a family favorite to which we will return many times while we live here.

Topsfield Fair


The biggest fair near Boston is the Topsfield Fair held every October. This fair has been running since 1818. Topsfield is about 20 minutes from our house.

The fair is very popular and friends had told us the best strategy was to go before it opened. We did, and we were able to drive right in and park with no traffic. We even got in before the fair officially opened and got to wander around with no crowds at all.

There was a petting zoo where the girls could pet goats and sheep. They also had elephant rides. Audrey had one but Charlotte was not interested.

When it came time for "lunch" we had to indulge in fair foods. First course was a cinnamon bun. Then some fried dough, of course, and later on some maple cotton candy (delicious!).

When we weren't stuffing our faces we saw sheep, cows and rabbits. And in the vegetable barn we saw one of the main draws of the fair: the 1600 lb. winning pumpkin.

I also took Audrey on the big slide. As is her pattern, she was a little trepidatious but ended up absolutely loving it.

By 1:00 or so it was getting really crowded. Carol had the brilliant idea to quit before everyone got tired and cranky so we did. After we left the parking lot we passed the three-mile long line of cars waiting to get *to* the fair. Yup, we did it right!

Maker Faire New York


I've subscribed to Make: magazine since the first issue several years ago. I wish I had the time and money to make just about every project they publish. Once in a while I get to make a project with the girls. It's part of my secret plan to make geeks of both of them.

A few years ago they started holding Maker Faires in the Bay Area and I've been waiting for the opportunity to attend. Earlier this year they announced there would be a Maker Faire in New York City in September. Sign me up!

The original plan was for the whole family to go for the weekend. But the girls have ballet on Saturday morning and Audrey has soccer. For some reason ballet feels "serious" and we don't want the girls to miss it if we can help it. So the plan changed to driving to New York on Saturday and coming back Sunday. Carol wasn't interested in that plan, and we figured Audrey would enjoy the fair a lot more than Charlotte, so it became an "Audrey and Dad" trip.

We got out of Boston about noon. I had decided to stop in Hartford, Ct to visit the brand new Connecticut Science Center. Hartford is exactly halfway to New York so it would be a nice break. We spent three hours at the science center and Audrey had a lot of fun playing with water, robots, electricity and music.

Sunday morning we got up early so we could be at the fair before it opened. It was held at the Hall of Science (New York's science museum), which was the site of the 1964 World's Fair.

Well, the fair was fantastic. We started at a booth where Audrey built a marshmallow gun out of PVC plumbing parts. Later she built a sailboat and learned how to crochet (the same publishers produce Craft: magazine). I think the highlight for Audrey was learning to solder. We assembled little badges with blinking lights. Audrey did a great job and was careful with the hot soldering iron.

We also watched a game of Life Size Mousetrap, watched the "Jet Ponies" and rode some unusual bikes.

Another highlight for Audrey was walking in a big tub of oobleck (non-Newtonian fluid). The girls have played with this at preschool and home, but it was cool to get to walk through a huge batch of it.

Finally, we had access to the Hall of Science itself which has a large Science Playground. Audrey loved the big rope web she could climb in.

The Maker Faire met all of my expectations and I'm very glad we made the trip. Hopefully it'll be an annual New York event.

September Fun


We've been having great luck with the weather for several months now. Seemingly all of our rain has come during the week and the weekends have been very pleasant. So we've been having a lot of fun outdoors.

The third weekend in September was Carol's birthday. On Saturday I took the girls to the Middlesex Fells near home for a few hours to leave Carol alone. We revisited one geocache that we had found previously and also found a new one. If you're not familiar with geocaching, people create "caches" containing a log book and some trinkets, then hide it and publish the coordinates and a description on a geocaching web site. Using a GPS device, one can go looking for them. When you find one, you leave a trinket that you've brought and perhaps take one that you like from the cache and sign the log. It's a great thing to do with kids.

On Sunday, Carol's actual birthday, we served her the traditional breakfast in bed. The girls set the menu: green eggs and ham. I couldn't figure out how to make green ham on the spur of the moment, but the eggs came out great.

At midday we went geocaching again, this time in Breakheart Reservation. We had a very pleasant walk in the forest and found two caches. There was a third that has apparently been "muggled" - taken by the uninitiated.

Sunday afternoon we had a bunch of the neighbors over for Carol's birthday party potluck. Carol had slaved for hours to make her favorite chocolate cake. We had a lot of fun.

For her birthday I got Carol one of her favorite things: a Lego house kit. She spent the next week putting it together with the girls after school. We now have a whole Lego village in our living room. Except Charlotte says we still need a grocery store.

We are more than a month into school now. Audrey is making great progress on reading and math in first grade. And Charlotte greets Carol every afternoon with "I love school!"

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Breaking Glass


I've been trying to dispose of the debris from the kitchen remodel with as little material as possible going to the landfill (or wherever garbage goes here - I really have no idea). I've been able to give away most of the stuff (old cabinets, the pallet on which the the new cabinets were delivered, etc.) on craigslist and freecycle.

The old double door that I removed was rotten and no one wanted it. I figured I'd remove the dual-pane glass cartridges from the doors and someone might want them to build into new doors. But when I was trying to remove one of them I broke one of the dual panes. It was pretty cool, because I stressed it and cracked it. The fracture spread very slowly. I was able to go in the house and get the girls so they could watch and listen to the pane slowly fracture all the way and then, with a tap, collapse into a pile of "diamonds".

But that left me with a cartridge with one intact pane and a bunch of rough broken glass around the frame. Nobody wants to handle that. In order to dispose of what was left I needed to break the second pane. That sounded like a great thing to let Audrey do. I set her up with safety glasses and a hammer and told her to start swinging!

She didn't like the loud noise of the hammer blows, and she thought the glass would be even louder when it broke. So I added ear protection. Two blows later and the job was done. Both Audrey and Charlotte thought it was pretty cool.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Backyard Biology



Yesterday Carol heard a racket upstairs and discovered Tessa playing with a chipmunk she had killed. Carol removed the chipmunk and today she showed the girls where it was so they could look at it with their magnifying glass. When I got home from work they were playing with the corpse. Sort of like home school biology.

I'm surprised that Charlotte is not squeamish at all and has been carrying the unfortunate critter around in her hands.

Tessa is nonplussed.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Maine Weekend


This weekend we loaded up Ruby Tuesday and headed for the coast of Maine. We already had a plan to go there when last week Audrey asked me out of the blue, "Dad, can we go to a lighthouse someday?" Excellent timing! That gave me a theme for planning what to do on the trip.

Audrey had her first soccer game Saturday morning, followed immediately by her first ballet lesson. Charlotte had her first ballet lesson at the same time as Audrey's soccer game. Our chauffeuring career has begun! We were done with all that by 11:00 and we got out of town before 1:00. It's less than a two hour drive to our destination.

We stayed at the KOA campground in Saco, ME. KOAs are like the McDonald's of camping - they aren't exactly "wild" but you always know what you're going to get: clean and well-run. And they serve inexpensive outdoor pancake breakfasts! This one even had an ice cream social Saturday night.

I brought along Audrey's bike. She was very concerned that the campground wouldn't have paved roads. It didn't, but it had well-packed gravel and she had a great time riding her bike around the loop where we were camped. Audrey finally let me show her how to tip the bike to one side and lean on that foot while getting started and that made a big difference. That girl just does not want to be told how to do things!

After exploring the campground we headed for Schooner Mini-golf nearby. Carol and I were neck and neck for the entire round but I ended up winning by a stroke on the last hole.

Then we drove through the busy little town of Old Orchard Beach, complete with an amusement park right on the beach. It looks like a fun place to stay for a few days next summer and there are some campgrounds right in town. The KOA also runs a shuttle to the town.

Back at the campsite I built a very slow-developing fire. The wood seemed dry but it took forever to get going. I'm going to have to cheat and pack a blowtorch. We all roasted hot dogs for dinner and then the girls headed off to the ice cream social while I watched the fire. Even after ice cream it was still mandatory that each girl roast a marshmallow and make a s'more before bed.

Audrey and Charlotte befriended boys Nathan and Christopher at the ice cream social and we ended up at the pancake breakfast with them, too. Then they all played together at the playground for quite a while before we headed back to break camp.

I had done some research on lighthouses while planning the trip. Maine has dozens of them but many are not open to the public. Even the ones that are have restrictions on age or height the preclude our kids from climbing the towers. We ended up going to the most popular Maine lighthouse: Portland Head Light. No tower climbing, but a decent museum and it's in a large park that is the former Fort Williams (for those of you in Seattle, think Fort Casey).

We spent several hours at the park. After visiting the lighthouse and museum we had a great picnic on the grass. Then we explored the rest of the park, following little trails to secret picnic tables and to chimneys for underground rooms near the old gun emplacements. Audrey and I got out on the shore rocks a bit.

I thought we could squeeze in one more lighthouse before heading home. I tried to find Portland Breakwater Light, aka "Bug Light", but instead I found Spring Point Ledge Light. Charlotte was tired and stayed in the van to play games with Carol while Audrey and I ventured out on the jetty to the light. The jetty is made of large quarried blocks of granite (5-6' on a side) placed with level tops and jumpable gaps between them. Audrey loved it. On the way back I asked her to count the rocks she stepped on and she counted 127.

While packing for the trip I remembered to pack binoculars and the girls' new magnifying glass. We used them a lot while exploring Fort Williams. We could see several other lighthouses in the distance, and we watched a large tanker very slowly enter the harbor and dock with the help of three tug boats.

One of my main missions as a dad is to show my kids as much of the world as I can. When I feel like I've created a good dose of discovery it makes me very happy so I came home from this trip on a high. Great weekend.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Labor Day Weekend Staycation

Carol and I tend to avoid travel on the big three-day weekends because we hate the traffic on either end. So for the past several weeks I had been collecting ideas for things to do near home. We ended up doing almost of them, plus one or two unplanned activities.

Saturday

We started out the weekend by heading to Concord, MA and renting a canoe. Charlotte has a fear of small watercraft so it was just Audrey and me. Carol and Charlotte went back into Concord center to the Farmer's Market and scored some delicious fresh corn.

Audrey and I paddled down the Sudbury River to where it joins the Assabet River to become the Concord River. Most people go all the way to the Old North Bridge, but I was getting a good workout controlling the canoe in the gusty winds that were the last remnants of Hurricane Earl. We got to see turtles sunning on logs which was the highlight for Audrey. I was surprised that we saw hardly any water fowl.

Once we met up with Carol and Charlotte again we headed to Walden Pond for a swim. The water was perfect temperature and the girls and I played in the pond (where I come from we'd call it a lake) for an hour or two. The winds were making the pond just a little choppy so Audrey got some practice with open water swimming.

On the way to Concord we had passed through the Minute Man National Historic Park. Since we were there, we stopped at the Visitor Center. It happened to be closing, but we got to look around for a few minutes and then walk a bit of the Battle Road. Of course, once we had read more about the park and the day it commemorates, we had to drive back through Concord center and visit the Old North Bridge. It was all an excellent context for a little history lesson for the girls.

Sunday

There was a boy on Audrey's t-ball team in the spring named Zach who lives close to us. Zach's dad tends to take Zach and his two brothers Linus and Miles out for a walk after dinner and they often end up at our house for some tag or swings or just chasing each other. Last week we made a plan that over the wekeend we would go apple picking together.

On Sunday morning we caravaned up to Russell Orchards in Ipswich. It's our favorite apple orchard since they have many varieties of apples. There is also a small farm where the kids can feed the animals. They all had a great time feeding long grass to the horses. We picked a couple of bags of apples for pies and for eating.

I had a loose plan to head to Newburyport after the orchard since we've not been yet and everyone says it's beautiful. But Dana (Zach's dad) mentioned that the nearby Audubon Ipswich River Wildlife Sanctuary was good for kids. So we found some lunch in Ipswich and then headed there.

We walked about half a mile through the woods and marshes to The Rockery. The sanctuary was formerly a private estate and was acquired by the Audubon Society in 1951. The previous owner had, starting in 1905, built a huge feature out of boulders (he even paid to have rail laid to the site to transport in the rocks). It apparently took more than 5 years using 50-100 Italian laborers. It's like a fake 50' high "mountain" with trails/stairs around and up it and a "grotto" (caves) under one side. It sits at the edge of a pond. It is kid heaven. I would have thought it was the greatest thing ever as a kid. Audrey couldn't get enough of running and climbing around on it.

After a while of playing there we walked the rest of the loop trail around the pond. Then the kids just had to have another go at the Rockery so back we went for 10 or 15 minutes more. It was hard to pull them away.

We walked back up to the parking lot and the big lawn around the former estate house. The kids had more fun climbing a tree and then laying on the ground spotting shapes in the clouds and wrestling with the dads.

Then Dana and Rachel came up with another great suggestion: wrap up the day at Richardson's Ice Cream in Middleton. Mmmm.

Monday

One thing I've been wanting to do for a while is visit the Lowell National Historic Park and especially take one of the canal tours. Lowell was the first planned industrial city in the Americas and the textile factories were originally powered by water. They built an extensive canal system to deliver that water throughout the growing city. The factories were mostly closed by the 1930s: textile manufacturing had moved to the South, nearer the raw materials and electricity had made the city's design obsolete. The city languished for decades but was sort of preserved through neglect. A rejuvenation project has been underway for almost 30 years now centered on the National Park status.

The canal tour was interesting as was a walk around town. We visited a Boardinghouse Museum (where the factory girls lived) and walked along more of the canals. The girls weren't into it so much, but I had a good time. We parents deserve some enjoyment too, don't we?

Overall it was a fantastic weekend. As I mentioned previously, I felt like I sacrificed all the nice spring weekends working on the kitchen and I wanted to have some good quality time with the girls in the last part of the summer. Mission accomplished. And more to come - we think we're going to go camping in Maine this weekend and squeeze out everything we can from the remaining good weather.

Storyland

Right after we moved to Massachusetts we started hearing about Storyland in New Hampshire. It's a theme park geared toward young children and other parents told us their kids loved it. We had last weekend open and the weather forecast was good, so off we went in our camper van.

Once we cleared a huge traffic jam at the New Hampshire border for the Boston-Portsmouth Air Show, we had a pleasant drive up to North Conway and Glen, NH. This is the heart of the White Mountains and very close to Mt. Washington - the highest peak in the Northeast.

We arrived at Storyland about 3:30. If you enter after 3:00 your ticket is good for another day as well - we planned to be there 3-6 on Saturday and most of the day on Sunday.

The girls loved it. Audrey is the perfect age for the place, and Charlotte will be next year. The rides are all scaled down to kid size: a roller coaster that is "real" (same construction as a big coaster) but is short and never goes all that fast; a ferris wheel with enclosed "balloons" instead of open seats; etc.

We had a great time exploring the park and riding rides until closing time at 6:00. Then we headed to the Green Meadow Campground right next door. What a peaceful place! Maybe it was just the contrast with a theme park full of bright colors and noise, but the campground seemed wonderful.

We hung out for a while and the girls played on the playground and made some friends (of course). Then we set off in search of dinner. When we got back it was dark and we took the girls out in the meadow for some excellent stargazing. The Milky Way was out in almost-full glory (the sky wasn't completely dark yet) and we could see lots of constellations and several planets. Audrey always amazes us with her observational skills and she pointed out several satellites. Then we set up the van and we all fell asleep.

We set the alarm for morning to give us time to get breakfast before being at the Storyland gate when it opened. We were second in line. I learned a lesson: do not ride the Tilt-a-Whirl first thing in the morning with a full stomach. I was nauseous to varying extents for a few hours afterward.

Both girls had little breakthroughs of their own. Charlotte was leery of the balloon ferris wheel and wouldn't go on it at first, but eventually she gave it a try and of course it was then her favorite ride. She also tried the Turtle Twirl (Tilt-a-Whirl - she cried) and even the roller coaster. Audrey hopped right on the roller coaster and loved it. She was most afraid of the Bamboo Chutes (log flume ride) but eventually tried it and then that was her favorite ride. We all had fun on the raft ride, on which one could get pretty wet. But it was a hot day and our clothing dried pretty quickly.

We covered pretty much the whole park and around 3:00 we started heading for the gate. Of course that took almost an hour - lots of "just one more"'s. We were OK indulging them, after all that's why we had come.

We headed home a different way, via Bear Notch Road and the Kancamangus Highway to I-93 in Lincoln, NH then down 93 all the way home. Traffic slowed at times but wasn't as bad as I imagined it could be on a Sunday evening heading back to the city.

The trip was a blast and I'm sure we'll go back for a weekend next summer.

Cape Cod

A year ago my parents reserved a condo for this August on Cape Cod, in the town of Yarmouth. On August 13th my parents and sister Elizabeth flew into Boston and on Saturday they kidnapped our children and took them to the Cape. They had a blast playing mini-golf and visiting the Zooquarium, etc. On Wednesday afternoon Carol and I drove down to relieve them and spend three days on the Cape as just our family.

We played a lot more mini-golf (Pirate's Cove was just across the road from the condo), ate some seafood, had breakfast at The Pancake Man, went back to Zooquarium and spent some lovely time on the nearby beach. It was a pleasant little mini-vacation.

Kim Comes to Visit

Carol's best friend is Kim, whom she met in Kindergarten in Richland. Kim lives in Fort Collins, Colorado and they are in daily contact over phone and internet. They have been talking for a while about how and when they might next see each other. Suddenly, an opportunity arose and on a couple of week's notice Kim arrived in Boston for a five day visit.

Carol tried to pack in the Boston experience for Kim while she was here. They walked most of the Freedom Trail and visited Salem. We also took Kim to our favorite local place, Mother's Pizza.

On Friday, my parents arrived and on Saturday they stole our children and took them to the Cape. So Carol, Kim and I headed up the North Shore to Marblehead. Marblehead is one of the most well-preserved historic seaports. The port area is packed with buildings dating back to the 17th and 18th centuries.

After Marblehead we headed to Rockport, another gorgeous and somewhat well-preserved New England fishing port. We wandered around town for a bit and then headed out to the edge of town to The Lobster Pool restaurant for some boiled lobster.

Kim and Carol had a great visit and of course it came to an end too quickly. But Kim swears she's bringing the whole family back for a visit sometime soon.

Miscellaneous Summer Fun

This is a catch-all post and photo album for various stuff we've done since returning from Seattle.

I came back from Seattle two weeks before the rest of the family. While they were gone I got to go on a Boston Duck Tour through work. We had heard that the Boston version wasn't as good, or as funny, as the Seattle edition. I thought the Boston tour was great. Lots of history, as you'd expect. Plus a pleasant cruise on the Charles River. The most memorable part was passing through the lock in the old Charles River Dam. The drawbridge, from the underside, is so rusted I'm amazed it can still carry traffic. I cringe now whenever we drive over it to go to the Museum of Science.

I also joined friends Marielle and David at the Medford Boat Club on the Mystic Lakes (on the dammed Mystic River). Connie and Mark joined in and we had a really enjoyable evening. Carol and I are very tempted to join. It's a great swimming place and the girls could learn to sail. We'll see.

At the end of July we went back to Cider Hill Farm up by the New Hampshire border to pick peaches and blueberries. And eat delicious cider donuts, of course. Carol made an absolutely delicious blueberry pie. That night we had an impromptu dinner party with neighbors Sue and Ming and the Burtnetts - it was the first gathering in our new kitchen. Very fun.

The next day we made the trek south of Boston to Ikea, and on the way back we visited Castle Island in South Boston. It's a very cool park with an old fort and great views of boats entering and leaving the harbor. Audrey had a lot of fun collecting hermit crabs. Eventually Charlotte joined in, too. We missed the free tours of the fort so we need to go back.

On August 8th the whole family was invited to a birthday party for Audrey's classmate Sophia who lives a couple of blocks away. After the party at Sophia's house the whole gang went to Circus Smirkus which was visiting Revere. It's a really cool youth circus (performers are age 10-18). We are excited for the girls to attend circus camp in Vermont next summer (if we can get in). Kids who attend the camp and become skilled performers can audition to travel around New England with the big top show for the whole summer! *I* want to do that!

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Best Bath Ever

Fact 1: After bathing together for years, a few months ago the girls decided to take separate baths. Mostly because Audrey is getting so big that she takes up more than half the tub.

Fact 2: When the girls get their hair cut the woman finishes up by giving them a streak of temporary color. Audrey got hers cut a few days ago and had a pink streak on each side.

Last night Carol washed Audrey's hair in the tub before Audrey's first day of school today (1st Grade!) and it left the bath water all pink. Audrey stayed in the tub to play. Charlotte went upstairs to visit with Audrey and soon called down, "Dad, can I take off my clothes and get in the tub with Audrey?"

"Of course you can!"

The next thing we heard was infectious giggling and laughter. It went on for 20-30 minutes and Carol and I were thoroughly enjoying the sound. When they got out and came downstairs in towels Audrey declared, "That's the most fun we've had in the tub ever!"

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Stop Motion Animation






Click the image to go to the video


Being a professional geek, I want to introduce my children to the wonders of geekdom as well as creative endeavors. One of the many hobbies I daydream about is stop motion animation.

I've done it before with still cameras and laborious work in software to stitch the images together into an animation. That would be way too tedious for young kids. But it occurred to me the other day that there's probably an iPhone app for making stop motion animation with the iPhone's camera.

Sure enough, there are several. I read the reviews and chose StopMotion Recorder. It's dead simple to use and has a timed shutter release (5 seconds is about right) so you can get in a rhythm of repositioning the "actors" in the time slot you have to work with.

I made a couple of test animations to show Audrey and Charlotte how it works. They got it right away. So off we went to the kitchen table to have them make their own. Charlotte lost interest pretty quickly (although she liked the concept), but Audrey was really into it. Click on the image to see the results.

I have ambition to get them interested in film-making in general. I hope to entice them to write scripts that we'll then shoot and edit together to produce shorts. They might be live action, or stop motion or flip book animation, or a combination. Instead of just watching movies and TV, I want them to make their own!

It's Great Being a Little Kid

A conversation last night after dinner...

Charlotte: "It's great being a little kid because little kids have servants."

Carol: "Oh, ya? Who are the servants?"

Charlotte: "Mommies and Daddies"

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Seattle Vacation 2010

The hardest part of making the decision to transfer to Boston was moving away from family and friends. So one of the things we committed to as mitigation was for Carol and the girls to spend a month in Seattle in the summer. This year that was the month of July. We all flew to Seattle on June 29. I returned to Boston (and work) on July 13, but Carol and the girls remained in the west until July 28.

I was worried that people would be busy and we wouldn't end up seeing very much of friends. But that was completely wrong. We had play dates almost every day with former preschool mates of Audrey and Charlotte. Plus we saw many of our old circle of Seattle friends. We hosted a party at Gas Works Park on a Sunday and about 50 people showed up. It was great to reconnect with them.

We also have good friends who have lived in Ecuador and Indonesia for years. They happened to be in Seattle for visits that overlapped with ours, so it was great to see Kathy & Mark and Jeremy. Kathy and Mark were in the process of moving from teaching jobs in Ecuador to new teaching jobs in Myanmar.

Audrey and Charlotte got plenty of time with grandparents and with aunts and uncles.

While in Seattle Audrey and Charlotte had a couple of sleepovers at my parents condo, and also several evenings of babysitting so Carol and I could have date nights.

After dropping me off at the airport for my return home Carol and the girls drove to Richland to spend a week with Carol's parents at their house a block off the Columbia River. Just about every day they took Grandpa's boat to "Car Beach" across the river to build sand castles and just hang out. They had a fantastic week at the Guettler house.

We also got to visit some of our favorite haunts in Seattle like Dick's Drive-in and Pegasus Pizza at Alki. We drove by our old house which hasn't changed a bit.

We were fortunate to miss the hottest weather of Boston's summer (so far). It became quite pleasant a day after the girls returned. We're in the middle of our second spell of pleasant temps and no humidity. The sticky weather will return, but it sure is nice while it's gone.

A Usable Kitchen


Right after I returned from the Seattle the granite counter tops were installed. Within a couple of days I had installed the disposer and plumbed the drain. Once I got the granite sealed the kitchen was suddenly usable!

I moved a bunch of the food back in, and the day before Carol and the girls came home I moved the table and chairs back in. After several months eating in the living room, we could live in the kitchen again. Very nice.

There are still a bunch of tasks left to do: install the backsplash tile (just ordered) and trim the window, door, toe kick and ceiling and install the over-the-range microwave. But I feel like I've already dedicated too much of this year's good weather to the kitchen so I'm taking the rest of the summer off from the kitchen and I'll get to those tasks in the fall.

We are loving our new kitchen.

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Riding With the Eastgate Crew

I got to join my old Eastgate Cycling Club for one of their weekly Saturday rides. We did 58 miles out to the bakery in Black Diamond and back. I was very happy to be able to keep up. I guess all that bike commuting is keeping me in some kind of shape after all.

I should get to ride again next Saturday, after summer weather's traditional July 5th arrival.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Audrey Rides a Bike


I have dad guilt that Audrey got to be 6 years old without learning how to ride a bike. Last year when she was five I was very busy getting ready to move and then moving. This spring I've been very busy with the kitchen remodel.

Audrey's personality has had something to do with it, too. She sometimes can have a very hard time taking instruction. She wants to figure it out all on her own. But some things are too complicated to figure out that way.

We bought new bikes earlier this spring for both girls. Audrey tried hers a few times with the training wheels on but didn't like it. The training wheels were a distraction - she didn't like the jerk when the bike came to rest on a training wheel.

This past weekend we went camping on Cape Code for 4 days (I'll post photos and video as soon as I can, but that's probably going to be after I return from Seattle). I figured a campground would be a perfect place to learn to ride - paved roadways with very little, slow-moving traffic. I was kind of determined that she was going to learn to ride. A little too determined, it turned out, because we ended up getting into a little battle of wills. Audrey decided she wanted Mom to teach her to ride her bike. Only Mom could hold on just so.

So she did that with Mom a few times for maybe a total of about 20 minutes. Next session I took her out and promised to hold on just like Mom. I did so for about 30 seconds, but it was clear she had the knack. So I changed to just having my thumb on the back of the seat and she still did fine. So I removed my hand and just ran beside her. She didn't notice. After about 30 more seconds I told her, "Look, Audrey, I'm not holding on." She gave me a quizzical look and then it sunk in that she was riding on her own. There was no looking back after that. And all she wanted to do the rest of the trip was ride her bike. Ah, success!

Next we worked on getting started. She still has a little trouble getting things ready to go, but once she does she can get started every time. She was also afraid to go downhill at first, but I talked her through modulating the brakes to control her speed and by the time we left she was going downhill with confidence.

As a parent learning to read and learning to ride a bike are big milestones for me. Now that Audrey has achieved both of them I have to figure out what the next milestones will be. Maybe music. Carol taught Audrey Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star on the piano and Audrey loves to play it. She also makes up pretty decent music of her own.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Kitchen Remodel. Part 3, 4, 5


It's been five weeks since my last update on the kitchen. I've been spending almost all my free time working on it. It was getting kind of old, but now there's light at the end of the tunnel and I'm re-energized. Plus we're going on vacation tomorrow (camping at Cape Cod for four days with our neighbors), then two days back at work before flying to Seattle. So I finally feel like I can take some time to post photos and an update.

The next phase after the last update was the wall work. I had to install drywall where the paneling wainscoting used to be and then blend that in with the existing plaster. That took a lot longer than I expected. Then we skim-coated the walls with slightly watered-down joint compound to give a uniform texture. Once that was done, Carol stayed up very late one night priming and painting because we were so excited to finally have paint on the walls.

Our original plan was to wait until the whole project was done to refinish the floor. But after talking to people about what it would be like (I'd never done it) I decided to go ahead while everything was out of the kitchen anyway. The range and refrigerator won't fit through the interior doors, and I didn't really want to put then outside for several days. So I just put them up on cantilevered platforms so I could refinish the floor well under their fronts. That worked pretty well.

Once the walls were painted and the floor done, it was finally time for cabinets. The refrigerator bay and its component pantry cabinet, overhead cabinet and plywood wall are the anchor for the whole kitchen. For example, the height of the overhead cabinet once it cleared the refrigerator determined the level for all of the other upper cabinets. It took a couple of tries to get it right, but now it's perfect.

Then on to the easy part - installing the rest of the cabinets. The Ikea cabinet system is wonderful. All of the cabinets are made out of the same parts just in different dimensions. Once you've assembled one cabinet you can assemble all the others in about 5-10 minutes each. Then the upper cabinets are installed on a steel rail. You just determine the height of the rail that will give you the cabinet height you want and bolt sections of rail to the studs wherever you can find studs. I used nice big lag bolts. Once the rail is installed, the cabinets just hang from it by sliding bolts - you install two nuts per cabinet and you're done. I didn't have to do one single bit of leveling on the uppers.

The base cabinets are also easy. They rest on legs that are big screws, so you can very easily level a cabinet by just turning its legs. Bolt them to the wall with a couple of molly bolts and Bob's your uncle.

Finally it was time to remove the old sink and cabinet. I had been waiting as long as possible because living without a kitchen sink would be the hardest part of the project. I had to cut the supply pipes to get the cabinet out. Then drill a bunch of holes in the new sink cabinet and figure out how to maneuver it around the orthogonal supply and drain pipes. With Carol's help I got past that hurdle.

Then it was time to plumb for the new sink and provide take-offs for the dishwasher and ice maker. After literally about 90 minutes at Home Depot trying to solve the plumbing fitting puzzle and do it with compression fittings instead of soldering, I surrendered and decided to solder. But I was smart about it this time. I cut all the pipe and fitted the whole system together dry, then took each assembly separately to the garage and did all the soldering comfortably at a bench with a vise to hold the work. Easy peasy. Then just bring the assemblies back in and install them in the compression-fitting shutoff valves. It might not look like a real plumber did it, but I'm happy with it.

The next major piece is the countertops. We thought granite would be too expensive but it has come down in price quite a lot. In fact, composite quartz and recycled glass countertops are much more expensive than granite now. Plus we don't have all that much countertop. So we decided to go for it. Carol placed the order today, tomorrow we stop by the slab yard on the way to Cape Code and select our slab, Monday they are supposed to come to make the template and when I get back from Seattle in mid-July it should be ready to install with undermount sink pre-attached.

If all goes according to plan, I'll install the microwave and the tile backsplash when I get home and when Carol and the girls get home at the end of July we'll have an almost-finished kitchen.

Whew. Yes, I'm tired. But also very excited to see it coming together.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Family


We're having a little summer preview at the moment: it has been over 90 degrees the past two days and somewhat humid. Tonight we decided to go out to dinner at air-conditioned Turner's Seafood Grill - our favorite Melrose eatery.

The girls had freshly washed hair and they each chose a dress to wear. Charlotte picked a Christmas dress from Grandma (with matching doll dress that fits Baby Puppy). Audrey wore a summery white frock.

We had a lovely dinner with two extremely well-behaved and polite girls. It was one of those moments when I especially revel in this family.

Monday, May 24, 2010

John's 50th Birthday


Friday I reached the half-century mark. It's hard to believe I've been alive that long. Like most people I talk to, I feel much younger than my actual age.

Carol has started a babysitting swap with our new next door neighbor Sue. So on my birthday we had a date night. We revisited an Italian restaurant near Fenway Park that we discovered a year ago when we were here house hunting, and then walked across the Fens (a big park) to the Museum of Fine Arts (in background of photo above) where we enjoyed a couple of hours of blissful, child-free browsing. There is currently an interesting Talouse-Lautrec exhibit, and exhibit of Harry Callahan photography, a fascinating Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528) printmaking exhibit, and a visiting Van Gogh ("The Sower") that is displayed among the other Impressionist masters.

Saturday was a busy day with T-ball photos in the morning and a game in the afternoon, plus preparing for a little birthday BBQ in the late afternoon. We invited some friends from work and some neighbors and had a wonderful time. It was a perfect day for it - sunny and 70s.

Sunday I got a little further on the kitchen project by getting the floor sanded. All of the scratches and stains are gone and it's ready to be refinished. Before that I need to finish the walls (which I should be doing right now instead of writing this). Once the walls are painted and the floor is finished, it'll be time to hang cabinets and we'll be in the home stretch.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Kitchen Remodel, Part 2


It's been nothing but fun around here on the weekends and evenings!

Two weekends ago I spent most of the time removing wallpaper and glue. Last weekend I made some minor electrical adjustments and got the drywall all hung (replacing the paneling wainscoting that we removed). This weekend I spent most of my time replacing the old warped sink window.

Just a little bit more fine tuning to do on the drywall mudding. It's a little harder to match drywall to plaster than it is to do all new drywall. We have one portion we can't close up because we're waiting for the electrician. He's supposed to come first thing tomorrow. Then I can complete the rest of the taping. Finally we'll skim coat all of the wall surface that will be visible.

Next up is probably floor sanding. We were going to wait until after the kitchen was complete but it makes sense to do it before the cabinets are in.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Ladder Cat



I guess Tessa wanted a better view of the squirrels in the backyard trees.

As you can see in the background, the kitchen remodel is progressing. Two weekends ago I got all of the wallpaper off. Last weekend I got all the drywall hung, and this past weekend I got it taped and mudded. One more coat of mud to go tonight, then a skim coat of drywall compound and then we can paint. Now I'm deciding when to refinish the floor. We might decide to sand it now (before cabinets) then protect it and not actually finish it until the family is gone in July (to avoid exposing the girls to several days of fumes). Then we'll be ready to install cabinets.

Friday, April 30, 2010

T-ball Opening Day



Audrey is playing T-ball in the Churchill American Little league in Melrose. Carol and I are coaching the Twins. Last Saturday was Little League Opening Day with a parade and treats and bouncy houses. Click on the photo to go to the video.

Swinging Girls



Ah, the simple things in life: 40 seconds of two girls enjoying their swings. Click on the photo to go to the video.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Kitchen Remodel, Part 1

Kitchen Remodel, Part 1

We finally got started on the kitchen remodel we've been planning since we bought the house last summer. I got the new exterior door and siding done in October but then took the winter off.

We have set up a temporary kitchen of sorts in the living room. We have all of our food there and the microwave and the dining table. We'll leave the sink and dishwasher hooked up as long as possible. We can do dishes in the basement utility sink when we need to. We can just move the range and refrigerator around in the kitchen as needed.

Today we removed all of the wainscoting and a couple of the cabinets. I'll get the rest of the cabinets, except for the sink cabinet, out during the evenings this week. Then I have drywall to install to replace the wainscoting. Meanwhile Carol will be removing the wallpaper.

Now that I can see what I have to work with I'm feeling encouraged. Hopefully we can be finished in about three weeks.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Warm Welcome


I rarely travel for business these days, but tonight I returned home from two nights away in Philadelphia. The girls really missed me (as I did them)! They picked me up at the T station and Audrey hopped out of the car and into my arms for a huge hug. Charlotte was strapped in, but when we got out of the car she hopped up and melted into my arms for a long time. Then they took turns getting more hugs and kisses. We went to dinner and I had to sit with both of them. It was very sweet, and I can't imagine a better welcome home.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

New Kitchen



Our new kitchen arrived today, courtesy of Ikea. At least the cabinets did. It doesn't look like a lot but there are 14 cabinets there.

Now if they would only install themselves. Time to get serious.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Weather at the Methots' House


A very good and generous friend and fellow geek sent me a personal weather station a few weeks ago: an Oregon Scientific WMR200. It's been set up for a while now but I had to write some code to get the data it gathers uploaded to the internet for all to see.

If you've never visited The Weather Underground, it displays data from thousands of personal weather stations everywhere. The "WunderMap" will guess where you are and show stations in your area. The Methot homestead is now present as station ID KMAMELRO4. Bookmark that and you'll always be able to see what the weather is on our back porch!

Monday, April 12, 2010

Mystic Seaport


We've been itching to get out camping this spring. This past weekend had a decent weather forecast so we loaded up the camper van and headed to Mystic Seaport in Mystic, CT. I have heard about it for years but had never been. Their web site lists lots of activities for kids.

It is a museum that was started in 1929 to preserve the history of America's relationship with the sea. Starting with a single sailboat, it has grown into a large site on the Mystic River with a 19th century village consisting of real period buildings that have been moved to the site from nearby over the years. Each of the buildings now houses a business that would have been present in the area during the peak of shipbuilding just before the Civil War: a cooperage, a sail maker, a cordage, wood carvers, shipwrights, a navigational instrument shop, etc. Plus there are a schoolhouse, a general store, an apothecary, a couple of churches and other town buildings.

For kids there is a playground with boat "playscapes", the Map Spot where kids learn about maps by making them, an exhibit on canals where kids have to "engineer" one, tons of model boats in various exhibits, three sailing ships to climb around in and on, a sawmill where they make huge parts for ship restoration, period games on the town green and a huge 3D model of the Mystic River area when it was a center of shipbuilding. Oh, and a place to build your own wooden boat. Audrey and Charlotte loved all of it. We got there about noon on Saturday and stayed until it closed at 5:00. Then we returned about 10:00 on Sunday morning and stayed till 3:30. We still didn't see everything.

We stayed at a KOA campground nearby. The girls were very excited to sleep in the camper van again. Charlotte decided she is old enough to sleep in the pop top and she did, all night without even waking up! I got to sleep on the lower level for the first time ever, on the softer mattress and with my sweetheart.

We're going to be locked down at home for a while with an imminent kitchen remodel and coaching Audrey's T-ball team, so it was nice to get away for a weekend. We had a really fun time.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Robotics Competition Videos


As I've mentioned I volunteered as a mentor for the Melrose High School iRaiders robotics team for the 2010 FIRST Robotics Competition season. The 2010 Boston Regionals were held March 26-27 at Boston University. Below are links to several videos from the competition.

We didn't complete construction of our robot until the last minute, so we didn't have nearly enough time for testing. We had reliability problems in the competition: mainly the chains kept slipping on the drive wheels, making it difficult to maneuver. More testing would have revealed that weakness. Next year we'll try to manage the schedule better.

* Overview Video
* Qualifying Match 59
* Qualifying Match 67
* Qualifying Match 77

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Charlotte Ballerina Redux

For some reason the initial attempt at uploading the video failed. You can now see the video here. I also updated the link in the previous post.