Sunday, April 25, 2010

We're Not Obsessed!




Squeaker and I had a nice long weekend with her extended family, though unfortunately I had my camera hidden away and didn't get any pictures. I can say for sure that her Aunt Nancy was elevated to rock star status. Squeaker discovered (as part of her usual conversational routine) that Aunt Nancy has a pet Bunny.

The pictures are of our adventures yesterday. The first is from another bike ride, finally got on the trail I have been looking for, so this time we ran out of time before we ran out of pavement. It was also getting really muggy (which makes me feel better about some of the times I had decided not to take her out last year). After our ride we headed an hour west and hit the local children's museum for a couple of hours. Finished with that, we headed west again for another hour and had a picnic dinner at a local playground. Squeaker discovered that the blackberries blend well with the brie when you mash them up with the crackers (and yes, Brite the spots did come out of her new purple and white shirt).

Have a good week!

PS Those are bunny ears she's making in the pictures. And you thought I was the obsessed one with all the rides...

Monday, April 19, 2010

The Running Naturalist


Squeaker and I continued our outdoor adventures this weekend. Our bike ride was some what disappointing this weekend because the rail trail we picked had the decimal to the left of the 5, not the right. Despite this challenge, Squeaker was a champ when I tried to take her through the nearby cobble stones. Well, she was a champ for the first five feet, but she found it too difficult to drink from her water bottle and made me turn around.

Yesterday we went on our first hike together. We went to a nature area near our house (not being sure of how long we would be out, it didn't seem worth driving too far). I should probably note that Saturday we had spent a little time in a city park. We went the long way around a small lake to get to a playground. Squeaker had insisted on running much of the trip. When she runs with me she can't help but giggling, so we couldn't help but have a good time.

As we were driving to the nature area Squeaker kept insisting that we would run. For my part, I kept suggesting that she needed to be careful running on trails. The trip got off to a rocky start (pun intended). Shortly after we slipped beneath the canopy, she wanted to go back to the car. I suggested we push ahead, but again a few yards later, she wanted to stop again. This time we took a knee and discussed the issue.

Squeaker was worried that the woods might hold creatures that wanted to eat her. The one she seemed most concerned about was a fox (whenever we drive home at night, we look for the neighborhood fox). I listed the woodland creatures that we were likely to see, deer, squirrels, birds, and yes foxes and suggested that all were likely run as soon as the heard us. Moreover, I was fairly sure that foxes were nocturnal and so would be asleep anyway. That seemed to quell her fears so we headed on down the trail. We stopped and looked at new ferns beginning to unroll, wild flowers, and ant hills. Mostly we walked, but sometimes we ran, and we had fun seeing the sights. In the midst of one of our giggly jogs squeaker stopped in her tracks and found a piece of fruit full of ants.



While we were still looking at the fruit, we heard a rustling in the woods nearby. I caught a glimpse of a small form darting though the leaves and got Squeaker turned around to see it. It paused for a few seconds to consider us, then headed on its path, perpendicular to our own. It was a large, red fox, with a bushy tail following it through the woods. Fortunately, Squeaker was excited, not scared, though she did question my credentials as a naturalist, "Daddy, you said foxes were nocturnal." I don't think she bought my excuse that it was looking for a midnight snack.


Once we cleared the woods, we ran the quarter mile back to the car. She was tired and stopped whenever I got too far ahead of her, but persevered and ran the most of way. I let her get to the car first and on the way home, she suggested a schedule of who would win the race back to the car (first we would alternate, then she decided it made more sense to let each of us win ten times in a row).


I put her down for her nap after we got home. She hasn't slept at her nap lately, but I think this time she was out before I had cleared the stairs...

Monday, April 12, 2010

Outdoor Adventures


A while ago I bought Squeaker that trailer so we could go on bike rides together. Until this weekend we've used it once. She didn't appreciate our one ride on hot day down our bumpy dirt road. So the trailer has lain fallow in our garage through two falls and a spring (I don't count summer, because I don't want to bake her). This weekend we've had two great (if short) rides. She had a blast looking at the trees as we rode around our first capitol.

Seriously she was looking at the trees and was not bored. She was looking for good climbing trees (smooth bark, well spaced limbs). This tidewater forrest had an ample supply for her to examine. I was happy with to have the trees because their absence meant that I was fighting with 20 knot winds.

Yesterday, we got in two trips, a short bike ride and kayaking on a local lake. The ride was on our town's one off road, paved bike path, with a round trip of four miles. We started and finished from that playground, so this time she was mainly concerned with when we could turn around and go back to the playground.

Kayaking with Squeaker was fun too. We saw turtles and a few fish. She listened to me about where to sit and not to stand up. She really wanted to paddle (something like an African Swallow carrying a coconut across the English Channel). We compromised by paddling together for a while.

We finished our day with a little soft serve ice cream. I decided that we would share a cone. That went pretty well at first. She took a bite, and by virtue of my size and having provided the day's locomotion, I would take a larger bite. As we got down to the cone, Squeaker started taking two or three bites. As we moved down the cone, in her sugar haze she stopped handing the cone back to me. Picture if you will my sweet little girl holding the cone with both hands and pulling back with all her might. It was all I could do to pull the cone close enough to me so I could take a bite. It is kind of hard to fight over an ice cream cone without spilling it or breaking it, but we did it.

When we got home, she didn't ask to play before bed and is still sleeping too boot....

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Princess Arctic Fox







I am tempted just to let these pictures paint a picture of the weekend, but then you wouldn't hear about the snake Squeaker held or that she's really tough unless it comes to scrapes and hydrogen peroxide. And no, I didn't tell her to put the pelts on her head. She did that purely by instinct.

HAPPY EASTER!