Sunday, August 28, 2011

Celebrations Abound!

I thoroughly relished my first birthday as "Mama Kate" and felt blessed to celebrate with my family.  Grandma and Granddad came over for a casual lunch of mojito salad and cupcakes; later, we attended a garden party honouring our friends Jane and Hermann's 30th anniversary.  And to top it all off, Eliot stood alone for the first time yesterday!  

Happy Birthday Mama K!
Jane's Garden
Standing in the sun
After an exciting day!

Monday, August 22, 2011

Ten Months

Another month, another update...Eliot continues to race around the house by furniture walking or commando crawling and can take steps holding on to just one hand.  He also pushes up from his tummy onto his hands and feet - a veritable baby downward dog!

He's eaten a few new foods recently (yogurt, cottage cheese, nectarine) and has enjoyed everything.  Nineteen pounds and counting!

AND, we have a first word: dog!  

Commando crawling at Gail & Andy's

Baby yoga at Dawn & Paul's

Saturday, August 20, 2011

The Finished Masterpiece

At eight months pregnant, Jean began working on a baby sampler.  She kept it hidden initially because we hadn't yet divulged Eliot's name and, immediately after his birth, cross-stitching sank to the bottom of her priority list!  But, a couple days ago, after much effort and many hours, she picked up her project from the framer's.  It now adorns Eliot's wall and looks amazing against the dill pickle paint.



Saturday, August 13, 2011

Peek-a-Boo

Every day, Eliot becomes more adept at standing in his pack-n-play.  And, now that he can squat down and pull himself back up like a pro, he only wants to play one game...

And up...

...and down

Short breather!

Monday, August 8, 2011

More Bookish Thoughts...

Mennonites Don't Dance


A Saskatchewan farm boy struggles to coexist with his moody father, who considers humanity a plague of locusts. A mother and pregnant daughter-in-law quibble over a pie but later unite in parenthood's greatest tragedy. A young girl moves to her grandparents' farm after her parents divorce and realizes that the future rests in her own hands. A daughter recounts her depressive mother's childhood while drowning in bitter grief. 

The characters in "Mennonites Don't Dance" authentically and fully integrate with their settings; they define themselves by land and climate but also by familial expectations. Certainly, patriarchs rule these families but the author portrays mothers and children with equally arresting clarity. 

Darcie Friesen Hossack prose is mesmerizing and ingeniously understated. She maintains strict narrative control while combining clean images with plot elements of both surprise and inevitability. As a result, the reader experiences authentic sentiment throughout this collection, which succeeds in maintaining structural depth, psychological intricacy and stunning emotional impact.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Marathon Play Date

While Jean and I took in a play at the Belfry yesterday, Godmother Dawn generously arranged a play date for Eliot with his pal, Marcello.  From the photo documentary, I would guess Eliot didn't even know we were gone!

Playing ball
Fun with Marcello
So happy! 

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Story Time Again


In Whitehorse, Nana and Grandpa's friend, Patti, gave Eliot his hands-down-new-favourite book: Eliot Jones, Midnight Superhero.

By day, Eliot Jones seems a mild-mannered, studious and observant boy.  "Eliot is such a quiet little thing," say all the grownups.  But, when the clock strikes midnight, Eliot transforms into a multi-talented superhero. Expert lion tamer, champion swimmer, sleuth extraordinaire, skilled pilot and experienced mountain climber, this young adventurer frequently assists the Coast Guard and the Queen. Tonight, Eliot receives his most important mission ever:" to use his Meteor-Busting Rocket Launcher to save the Earth from destruction. 

Anne Cottringer's charming book combines vivid imagination and perfect pacing to produce a wonderful read-aloud story. Alex T. Smith's cartoon illustrations add dimension and a touch of zaniness: he depicts the frizzy-haired, bespectacled hero skiing down glaciers and hanging out of helicopters. End papers bear detailed graph drawings of inventions stamped "Top Secret" as well as a note reading, "You were saved today by Eliot." 

Our Eliot listens to this book with rapt attention and smiles the whole way through.  More importantly, it explains why he acts so calm during the day: he has to conserve energy for saving the world!


Counting down till midnight