Friday, July 17, 2009
SUMMER, but wait, there's more!
Frost received his report card from the past two weeks of daily swim lessons. Apparently he has passed the Beginner 1 level and can start Beginner 2 next week. I have promised him a few days off swimming to have more unencumbered days but since swimming is at 9.30am-10.15am and is with his friend Alex it is not really a great burden. I have stayed to watch him swim on some days while other times Wren and I spend the half hour of the lesson in the playground. Wren loves to swing high and to climb the big-boy slide and shoot down "like a rocket".
Frost tells me that he passed the swim test for public pool (in his lesson). This means he can swim across the width of the pool and back in crawl stroke without drowning or putting his feet down.
I think he can do it but he swims in a super slow motion - semi submerged - kind of like a sleeper log which barely breaks the surface. From this low-slung position it is hard for him to get his mouth out of the water for side-breathing. Backstroke (which he does!) introduces particular problems with his sinking posture. To look behind with his legs sunk he has to reach his head very far back in a way that looks most uncomfortable. He strains like your cat might if you made her swim. Still, I am impressed at the distances he covers in his slow-motion crawl and hope that we can work on increasing his... buoyancy? Kick? Pull? I don't know what is wrong but I hope that practice will give him insight to be more floaty.
He IS very confident in doggie paddle and can cover great depths and distances, jump from the diving board, dive into 12 ft of water and retrieve dive toys so his water safety is much better this year.
Tonight, Frost is thrilled to have a sleepover at one of his best friend's houses. Isaac has been away visiting family and has now returned! Frost really missed him.
Wren and I had a lovely morning playing nursery rhymes on the iPod dock in his room. We danced and played instruments and he was very silly and giggled. I think we should get an iPod shuffle and another dock so the music of the family can be in more locations easily.
Right now, thoughts are going out to a family from our Heart Support Group whose child is in surgery. I hope that everything goes well for Mirabel.
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
I licked it
Frost tells me "I thought I had trodden on a needle but I looked at my foot and it was bird poop."
"So why are you spitting?" I ask.
"I touched it with my finger!"
"So, wash your hands."
"Well, I also licked my finger. Just a bit, like this."
"NO!" I shriek as he begins to show me by doing it again. "Wash your hands and then spit out some water."
Why? I have to wonder.
We had a fabulous time at Wild Waves. Fabulous.
Monday, July 13, 2009
Vashon Lavender Tour and Wild Waves
Anyway, I love the rain. Unfortunately, the snails do too. The damp is not turning us off our plan to visit Vashon Island today and see some farms on the Lavender Festival. We are also going to an open house for the kind of place we may think of buying. I stress "kind of" despite my husband's great enthusiasm to buy something right now and just figure out how to work it all out. I remain in the Discussion and Implications status of the project and am tentatively moving to the feasibility and waking up in the night worrying stage.
Tomorrow, we are going to Wild Waves - a local water park. Wren will be with Heather while Frost and I are going off alone to the land of waterslides and pools and splashing. Wish me luck and let us know if you want to join us.
Friday, July 10, 2009
Bumps in the roof
Thursday, July 9, 2009
I am small like a hippo
This morning, lacking any weaning signs from Wren I decided to discuss it with him. This is how the conversation went (he is a bit over 2 and a half).
Shannon: I think you should stop having Mummy's milk.
Wren: Why?
Shannon: Well, you are a big boy now, like Frost. Big boys don't drink mummy's milk.
Wren: I am not a big boy. I am a small boy. I am smaaaaallll like a ... like a giraffe!
Shannon: A giraffe? That's quite a big animal.
Wren: I am small like a HIPPO!
Shannon: OK, you are small but you are getting too big for mummy's milk.
Wren: Why, I LOVE to suck it. It is so tasty. I have some more now? Just a taste?
ARRRGHH!!!
I guess it will have to play out as angst and tragedy unless I am willing to continue. I am not sure.
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
The Art of Wren
Diggers
One of Wren's favorite subjects is big machines. He routinely draws diggers and big cranes and crane-diggers. This drawing shows a digger. The little orange circles are the centers of the crawler tracks which circle around them. The bumps are the crawler track treads surrounded by a big BODY of the machine. The top protuberance is the operators box and the scoop. The scoop is the line with a balloon like thing on the end. I think the lines may be a ladders since I often draw one. It may equally be a crane attachment or a bird. Frost was humbled by this drawing. "Wren draws better circles than me" he said.

Abstraction or Code?
Things are not always clear to me. This following picture is beautiful but I have no clue what is happening. It was drawn while we were on Vashon so I doubt Wren remembers either but he is not just making marks. He talks as he draws imagining what is going on. I can ask him tomorrow - he will probably say its a digger because there is a scoop up top but what are those little lines (usually called FUR when I ask)?


The Daddy Picture
Wren drew this when Heather was babysitter Frost and Wren. She says Wren drew it while Frost talked to him so I am imagining he drew the basics and then Frost asked him "where are Daddy's eyes?" or something like that. They both swear Wren drew it and Frost only wrote the title for him. Hrmmm.
When I asked Wren who he was drawing he said "daddy" but "Frost wrote Daddy." I then asked about the two lines on the chest and he described those as being "fur". He also described the hair on top as being "couple hairs". It was very funny..

HUGE Robot
Recently, Wren has started drawing robots. Today when he did this drawing I asked him about it and he said it was "a HUUUGE robot dancing with chains." Its interesting because it is much more upright than the diggers which overwhelm the page with their apparatus.
Wren Do Writing Like FrostFinally, here is an example of Wren's WRITING. On many of Wren's pictures you will see dashes like morse code to one side. This is Wren "writing" some title and signing DRAWING BY WREN. He noticed me writing on the sides or backs of some of his drawing and has become possessive about signing them himself.
This drawing of writing was done while Frost did his handwriting book this morning. We have started doing daily handwriting practice after breakfast and Wren, not to be left out, works quietly at his own writing. He said "Wren do writing like Frost".

I have signed Wren up for a weekly toddler art class at a nearby studio. I know he will enjoy painting at an easel and trying new ways to make drawings. I am looking forward to it myself.
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
6 months post-op Cardiology Clinic
I think that the appointment went ..... WELL!! The key words are "stable" and "hanging in there" and no procedures are needed for now. We are in a "wait and watch" stage with a follow-up in 6 months.
For those of you who don't know the background, Wren has Shone's syndrome with multiple problems in the left side of his heart, the side which pumps oxygenated blood to the body. The problems are mainly stenotic - which means that parts of the heart are too small which makes his left ventricle work harder to squeeze the required amount of blood through the obstructions.
The main areas we are watching are those repaired by Dr Hanley in November 2008: aortic valve and sub-aortic outflow tract. This appointment the gradient across these areas was stable. That is very good because in Shone's syndrome the blockages tend to be progressive but if Wren reaches a stable stage it could be a long while before he needs valve replacement surgery.
Joshua, ever the optimist, asked whether Wren will still need a valve replacement in the long term. I added, like by age 8? Josh felt that wasn't the long term and he meant by age 18. Dr Lewin said that "it depends" but he expected Wren to have a new valve by 18. This rather shocked me because I feel that we are forever teetering on the edge of valve replacement and cannot fathom the slightest chance Wren could make it to his teens before needing one. I thought Dr Lewin would laugh at the question.
After listening to Dr Lewin's explanation it seems that IF the AV area remains pretty stable we will now be watching the balance between the obstruction and the performance of Wren's left ventricle. The LV is now mildly thickened (not noticeably changed from before) but over time it is likely to thicken to maintain the work of forcing blood through the AV area. Right now, his LV is "hanging in there".
His mitral valve is also "hanging in there" with no appreciable increase in obstruction. The valve is abnormal but not stenotic and the regurgitation due to its abnormal function is only mild.
Wren's chest X-ray was clear (no more pneumonia) and Dr Lewin said it was not bacterial in the old X-ray and did not look severe.
The weights and heights were a bit flat - Wren was 13.2 kgs 4 months ago and is now 13.6 kgs (approx 30 lbs). However, I think that the last measure was a bit optimistic. He is 75th percentile for height and 50th percentile for weight. I need to make sure he eats but its ok otherwise and the lack of real weight gain may be due to a faulty weight last time and/or his 3 weeks of viral illness before school ended.
Overall, we are very relieved and quite happy. Wren is not healed but being stable is a pretty good second.
Monday, July 6, 2009
*** Fireworks ***
Thankfully In the evening Frost recovered enough to go to the park with us and some of our friends who risked the pestilence to join us in some patriotic activity. As dusk fell, other kids and parents came down to watch until we were quite a merry band yelling "OOOH" and "AAAAH" and waving sparklers.Alden, Frank and Trixie* with a Box of Fireworks they are NOT GOING TO LIGHT IN SEATTLE
July 4th Public SafetyALL FIREWORKS ARE ILLEGAL IN SEATTLE
The Seattle Police Department and the Seattle Fire Department would like to remind the public that there are no legal fireworks in the City of Seattle.
The possession, manufacture, storage, sale, handling and use of fireworks is prohibited. Fireworks offenses are gross misdemeanors, punishable by up to one year in jail and/or a $5,000 fine.
In Seattle its illegal to set off fireworks and none are sold in the city. However, native american reservations around the city are established as Federal land which is not bound by city laws. As a result they are free to engage in various nefarious activities such as gambling, drinking, selling tobacco cheaply and ...selling fireworks. On the way back from Canada last week we stopped at BOOM CITY which is a vast parking lot of firework stands. There were at least 4 aisles of about 40 enclosed stands, shuffling crowds scuffling rising into the hot blue sky. Each stand was enclosed with a front counter and shelves to the ceiling FULL of fireworks. These are not the little tubes and crackers we saw as children. The majority of them are huge and villanous with names such as "Decimator" and "Big Artillery" and "Haunted Clown." Josh spent some time looking at the amount of gunpowder in a couple and said that it was significant. The large ones are $50-$100 EACH firework and are about 30cm cubes. I have no idea what you get for that amount by comparison with our little fountains and we didn't buy any that large.
One exciting moment was when the police came by. It was only after we came home that I learned the details of the fireworks regulations (it is illegal but not strictly enforced unless there is a complaint and / or damage). They cruised the park and then stopped in the lot near us and got out. They went over to speak with another larger group of young adults who were letting off fireworks near the playground. Tara and I quickly grabbed the biggest fireworks from our box and stuffed them in our handbags like crims stashing our goods. We were planning an escape route. Joshua continued playing with the small ones as our cover since we believed only large fireworks were illegal. Fred and Tara asked if I was a US citizen as if I might get deported for a firework felony if I was not! I have decided I should pursue my US citizenship this year as I can now hold US and Australian without penalty. Then, if we get arrested for Seattle fireworking I can remain in the US in jail rather than being deported to Australia.
Anyway, A* and F* were afraid the police were going to come and arrest us but they moved off and the 4 groups on the field continued unabated in our pyromania. Honestly, having fireworks out in the field like that is safe if you keep a wide radius and maintain firework safety. Its so open and flat that there is no danger of starting a fire. Plus, we could keep a safe distance and still observe. The only dangerous moment was when another man set off two rockets together. One went straight up but the other went sideways and shot towards us for a while. That was a good reminder to the kids of the danger of modifying them at all.
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Dead Bicycle Beach, Vashon
We call it Dead Bicycle Beach because the on the bank above the beach people have 'dumped' old exercize bicycles and rowing machines. The kids loved to pedal the bicycles and look out to sea. Its a lovely idea and typically Vashon - quirky and spacious.
Alpacas at BreakfastBack at our house we enjoyed feeding alpacas. There were a couple in the paddock in front of our house and they liked to wander over in the morning and look at us. I asked for some food and the elder of the two males would come over as soon as he heard the sound of the pellets being dropped. Wren was anxious about their big teeth and after one attempt at feeding said "they want to eat me" and would do no more.
BrothersFrost and Wren have been fighting (literally) with the wooden daggers that Frost received from Pirate Camp and we bought at the Captain's Store. The joy was great but I felt that the danger of it ending badly was high so I have strung up a couple of pillows in the tree for swordplay. Wren is fearsome and I am glad he is not aiming at Frost because he has little to no judgment in his use of force or etiquette. Not facing him? Whack! Their ongoing combat games give me a deeper appreciation for this picture in which they are such sweeties.

Anyway, happy 4th of July! Frost was ill this morning so we have not had the planned gathering of friends. Thankfully, he is well enough for our personal evening firework explosion in the nearby park. We will be heading there soon.
Friday, July 3, 2009
Vashon, chocolate milk, free pizza
Move to Vashon?
Anyway, the 5 days on Vashon were lovely. I feel I know the island a little bit better which is good since the discussion on whether to move to the island continues. Despite his protestations, Josh's idea of planning is to look at online postings for 2+ acres and go "oh, what about that one." By contrast, I am a plodder. These are my questions:
If we bought 4 acres on Vashon:
1) Would the schools on the island be good enough for the kids?
2) How could I work and maintain the gardens / chickens / goats / vegetables / house / kids / lawns (ride-on-mowers) / community building?
3) With low vaccination rates on Vashon and significant body of water between us and SCH is it SAFE for Wren to live there?
4) Would I find sufficiently stimulating community and diversions on the Island?
5) Would I feel isolated?
6) If a bomb hit Seattle while we were visiting family abroad (so we survived) but all our money was in real estate, we would have no assets. Is it wise not to plan for this contingency?
7) Can we afford to own two properties and how much hassle is it to rent your home to strangers?
8) Do I want a goat I can't milk and my family won't let me eat and/or can I handle the breeding of goats for milk? If not, why have a goat? This seems effete. Just generally, why have livestock if the family won't eat our animals?
9) Would this kind of life lead to any change in habits for the kids and Josh or would they just sit inside our Vashon house and absorb their screentime and leave me with 10 extra chickens, a new goat and 4 extra acres of housework?
10) What would happen to our little menagerie while we went away on vacation?
11) Would our friends from Seattle visit or would we be starting from scratch?
12) What region of Vashon is the most amenable to my way of life?
13) How much would a place like this (on Vashon) cost? We have seen less developed ones for under 500K.
14) If the ferry was bombed or broke or something else occured to it, could I paddle a canoe across to the mainland in an emergency?
These are big questions. I do not have the answers but Josh continues to find lovely looking properties with tempting gardens. Further, I recall the happiness I felt in the Blue Mountains visiting friends yurts and cabins in the woods there.
So much of our lives is about sensible choices and doing things for the long haul but that can leave you defering life until you are too old to dig a ditch. Something about doing a thing because it is exciting and lovely and fun is good enough. We don't have to be utterly safe to make a thing worthwhile.