Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Life's A Beach In Port Aransas

We are having the best time ever hear in Corpus Christi/Port Aransas! Matt and I arrived in Corpus Christi on Christmas Eve. Since my niece, Jennifer, lives in Corpus we thought it would be great to spend Christmas with her. To sweeten the deal even more, my brother (Jennifer's Dad) decided to bring his family from California to Texas to be with his daughter and us for the holiday. So we got to spend Christmas day with my brother, Eric, and his family. A day and a half later Matt's family met up with us at Jennifer's house in Corpus Christi. Then on the 27th we all (Eric's family and the Lingard's) headed to Port Aransas where John and Eric rented some beach condos. We are here till New Year's Day. 

So far we are having so much fun spending time together. We have done a lot of relaxing and playing on the beach. Ian can sit and play in the sand for hours. Also, Ian has been a lot more interested in using the potty since Nana Jeanne gave him some Bob the Builder underwear. In fact, for the first time ever he went poo poo on the potty. Matt and I were totally thrilled to say the least. The picture below shows Ian in the very moment of this historic act. 



We've made several purchases at the local kite shop here and spent tons of time playing with fun little flying toys and kites. Eric and his gang of course have all their kite gear and some really cool giant power kites we've been playing with. Today we walked around this really beautiful bird sanctuary on a marsh. Anyway, there's too much to tell. I couldn't choose just a few photos to share so I'm posting a slideshow of our trip thus far below. We have really enjoyed spending time with both our families and are sad to see the time coming to a close. This has been a great trip for us and we look forward to many more with our awesome families!!


Monday, November 3, 2008

"This is Halloween. This is Halloween."

Yay, Halloween! I love Halloween! I love Halloween because it's low stress/high sugar, no obligatory gifting/shopping frenzy, pure fun, scary movies, make believe, dress up, crisp Fall air, and macabre mayhem. And as "Michael" the angel says, "You can never have too much sugar." Well, maybe you can consume too much sugar, but you can NEVER have too much sweetness. And here's some sweetness. Our little Lily two days before Halloween when we carved our pumpkin.

She's so cute it hurts.

Ian and Daddy carved the coolest pumpkin ever. 

Ian wanted our pumpkin to have square eyes. Probably because he likes Sponge Bob Square Pants. 

On Halloween we went to our Ward Chili Cook off/Carnival/Trunk-or-treat. Here are Matt and Ian in a Cake Walk. Everybody was a winner!

I was a hippie, Lily was my flower (Give flowers, not fights). Ian was the best, most scary dragon ever.

He won at the duck pond game. Actually he won at every game he played, which makes me think the games may have been rigged.

Matt with Lily flower. 

We got through the games pretty fast and truck-or-treating didn't start for a while so we snuck out and trick-or-treated the neighborhood for a bit. Ian really got into it. He would say "Trick-or-treat! I'm a dragon! Rarr!!!" The people would laugh, give him candy, and ask, "How old are you?" To this he responded, "I'm Ian!"

Check out his loot! What a haul! Yay, I'm going to get another ten years of Trick-or-treating out of this deal! Woo hoo, parenthood! 

Actually, I really had a great time. It was so fun for me to enjoy this holiday with my little ones. By the end of the night we were all so tired, but not too tired for a few more houses on our street and one more walk through the cool haunted house on the corner. Yay! Only 362 days till the next Halloween. Can't wait!


Thursday, October 23, 2008

Our Little Lily Flower

This last year has been so great. Our little Lily has added such joy to our home. Today she is one and I thought it appropriate to show a few photos from her first year with us. We are so grateful that she is with us. She is happy and fun and brings a softer dimension to our home with her squeals and laughter. In this photo she is only minutes old. She came three weeks early, in time for Halloween, and I couldn't have been happier to finally hold her in my arms.


These are her little feet at about six weeks old.


Here she is with Ian, her reluctant big brother. She is 4.5 months and he is almost 2 in this photo.


Here are the kids having fun at the neighborhood pool last May.


Lily still toothless at eight months.  


Lily and Ian this past July playing on their horsey with Daddy.


These last two photos were snapped within the last week. Her hair is getting longer and lighter as she has gotten older. It looks like her eyes are settling in on a beautiful hazel or steel gray color. Also, she has two bottom and four top teeth coming in. Little cutie!! We love her more than anything!


Pretty, pretty, tutu. She's almost walking. Pretty soon she'll be twirling everywhere. Our little Lily flower is such a delight. Happy birthday, little love!










Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Back In Time

Halloween is my most favorite holiday. We kicked it off by decorating our house around the first of October. Shortly thereafter we decorated our Potato Head Pirate Pumpkin. Ian helped while Lily was sleeping. He loved it so much that he played with it for about an hour or so after we had created it (Way worth the five quid I spent on the kit!). 

My birthday was Saturday, October, 11th and to celebrate we took the kids to a cool pumpkin patch and fall festival. It was so much fun to be together even though Ian whined a lot. 


I thought this was a cute shot of my kids' biscuits. 

This past Saturday was real low key for us. We lazed at home in the morning and then went to the mall in the afternoon so I could get some clothes for Lily. After stopping at the library, Matt drove us to his old elementary school. We stopped there and let the kids play on all the cool toys. They had the best time ever! It's great how entertained they are by free things like parks. Anyway, it was fun to see the beautiful neighborhood and school Matt lived in and attended as a child. It's kind of crazy that now we only live a few miles away from it. 


Here's Matt in front of his elementary Alma Mater. 



Monday, October 13, 2008

Win A Free Handbag

Handbag Planet is doing a promotion for the launch of their company. They are giving away 24 handbags in 24 hours on the day of their launch, which is October 15. Enter to win. What have you got to lose??

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Better Than We Deserve

Sorry about not posting since Ike, but our internet has been horrible since then. During the storm and after we never lost power, though we did lose internet for a while. Mostly everyone else that we know lost their power. In fact, the power was out in our old neighborhood for about two weeks. Anyway, we were fine and our house sustained no damage. Just a lot of scattered debris. Also, we had fun having Matt home for a couple extra days.

Now that our internet is really back up and running well I wanted to post a link to a little video of Lily that I made a few days ago. I hope everyone likes it! 


Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Escape Pod

One of my favorite podcasts is called Escape Pod. Every week it publishes short science fiction stories that are almost always fantastic, including Hugo award nominees. The voice talent is generally excellent and it is by far my favorite way to spend my commute. This week, the story was 'Usurpers' a futuristic take on high school cross country meets. The language is pretty strong, but the story put me right back on the Davis Dart’s cross country team. I was never any where near as intense as the runners in this story, and it kind of reminds me why I got away from competitive running. The runners out there will appreciate the story, and lover’s of science fiction will enjoy the podcast.

Friday, September 12, 2008

I Like Ike



Since yesterday we've been getting ready for Ike. We have not been asked to evacuate so we decided to stay and "shelter in place". We have our 72 hour kit, as well as water, food and whatever else we can think of. Here is a picture of Matt putting things into our garage that were in our yard. 

Our good friend Gwen Anderson is spending the night with us so we are having a bona fide hurricane party. We made yummy bean dip and chicken broccoli. Random!

Here's Matt and the kids enjoying the bean dip. Yes, I wrote kids, plural. Lily LOVES to eat any and everything. 

This was taken a couple of days ago but it showcases Lily's first little teefer. She's almost 11 months old. A little slow on the teefers there but I think I remember my mom saying I got mine in a little late too.


This is a little video documentary of current conditions in our neighborhood. Check back as we will post developments as we are able to. So far we are safe and well fed.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Camping's not as fun as it should be


Erin, the kids, and I just got back from a nice weekend trip to Corpus Christi. In spite of dire warning by park staff about a plague of mosquitoes of unusually large size, number, and vigor, we decided to go with our original plan to camp at the National Seashore on Padre Island. This is the campground where my family spent many a happy week camping when we lived in Houston. Though after this last weekend, I’m pretty sure that we must have been older than Ian (2.5 yrs) and Lily (10 mo) are now. We arrived Friday afternoon, hooked up with Jennifer Chase in Corpus Christi and headed over the bridge to the island. The drive was scenic, a straight shot through coastal prairie with occasional glimpses of dunes, the ocean, and wind-shaped trees. Cloud cover threatened rain all afternoon and evening, but provided shelter from the hot August sun, making for a very nice afternoon on the beach.















We stayed at Malaquite campground. The campground has been upgraded since my vacations there as a child, it now has private showers and the efforts of the park staff to anchor the dunes with grass and hardy runner plants seems to have succeeded; the sandy dunes that we used to camp among are now completely covered in green. Once we stepped out of the car, we were assaulted first by the heavy sea air, and immediately after by mosquitoes the size of quarters. A flock of them could easily have made off with Lily, but were much more interested in munching on Erin and Ian. On the beach the mosquitoes were practically non-existant, so we decided to set up camp on the beach. The beach below the campground has a strict no car rule, but Erin and Jennifer figured rightly that it would be much easier to unload the car if it were on the beach, so we unhooked the chain and drove 100 yards through the dunes onto the hard packed beach sand. We set up the Springbar screen shelter that mom and dad Lingard gave us for Christmas several years ago, securing with with a dozen foot-long sand stakes and one 2-foot-long superstake. Ian spent two or three hours running around scooping fine, white sand into his bucket and building a small city of ‘sand castles’ while we got camp and dinner set up. Jennifer was a huge help, mostly by helping to wrangle Lily, who is too young to leave unsupervised on the sand (she likes to eat it, or anything that she finds in it). Erin made some yummy chicken pot pie in our new 10 inch Dutch oven and we started getting ready for bed.

As soon as the sun went down the mosquitoes came out in force. At one point, Ian’s legs were covered in a black mat of mosquitoes, there was literally no visible skin! We got everybody bundled into the tents as quickly as possible, but not before Erin and Ian had received dozens of bites. I was moderately bitten, and I only found one bite on Lily after the entire weekend. Lily and I likely make more natural mosquito repellents than Erin and Ian. The four of us piled into the screen shelter, and Jennifer hurried off to stay in the cheep dome tent we gave her. I discovered that there are some cool beetles, about 0.5 in long and quite narrow, with two bioluminescent spots (bright green, like the green fluorescent protein from jelly fish that I engineer into my plants, also like firefly luciferase - a peroxisomal enzyme btw) at the base of their wings. One of these beetles hitched a ride on my back into the tent, so did a handful of mosquitoes. That night, we discovered a design flaw in the screen shelters - the doors do not seal at the base of the tent, providing a convenient entrance for mosquitoes attracted to CO2 that we respired into the tent all night long. Mosquitoes are also attracted to body heat, but the air was about body temperature, so that wasn’t likely as much of an attractant. I got maybe one or two bites during the night, Erin and Ian each got easily three dozen. In the morning, Ian’s fair skin on his neck and legs was red and swollen from all of the mosquito bites. Whenever he saw one of the buggers land on him or felt it bite, he would point and say ‘ahhhh’ and wait for somebody to slap it off of him.

We had a great time playing in the beach the next morning. The mosquitoes were pretty much gone with the morning breeze, which also helped to keep the sun from being too hot. Erin made yummy cinnamon rolls, Ian played in the sand some more, and I got to break out my Ocean Kayak. We all took turns riding it. There were just enough waves to make it interesting. I made Ian come out with me twice, he took a couple of waves full on in the face and decided that he was done. I couldn’t get him to come out with me for the rest of the trip and was reminded of all the times that my dad had to force me into the sailboat with him when we were at the beach. I was always terrified and would cower in the bottom of the boat trying to disappear into my life vest. At the time I really hated it, and probably was pretty mad at my dad. Now, I’m glad that he forced me to do it, eventually I learned to love the speed and the challenge of sailing. I could see a similar pattern begin to establish itself between me and Ian.





After 3 to 4 hours of playing on the beach, Ian started to go completely crazy, he was hot, thirsty, tired, and done being sandy. Erin and I realized that we are not ready for beach camping with babies and threw all of our stuff back into the minivan. On the way back to Jennifer’s house, we hooked up with her roommate, who was sailboarding in the park at a really cool beach called Bird Island. It is on the bay side of the island, so the water was flat (no waves) and shallow for hundreds of yards off shore. There were easily 40 people out on sail boards enjoying the light wind. Jennifer’s room mate is a champion amateur wind surfer, and she agreed to give me some pointers. I was mostly interested in learning to beach start. After about 15 minutes of instruction and pointers, I was off and running. I brought the board that Erin’s brother Eric gave me, but ended up using Jennifer’s roommate’s board. In the end, we left Eric’s windsurfer with Jennifer. It is too hard for us to find time to use it with two babies to wrangle, and the best chance that we will use it is if we go and visit Jennifer again. With both kayaking and windsurfing under my elastic waistband, I was feeling like the day was a complete success. We stayed the night at Jennifer’s house, a nice little red brick 1920’s house that is a block from the beach in Corpus Christi.

We spent Sunday doing a few touristy things in Corpus Christi. I fell completely in love with the town and would move there in a heartbeat. It is not often that you find an area with year-round warm, white sandy beaches and blue water near a relatively large town that is as underdeveloped as Corpus Christi. The houses by the beach in town are all charming Mediterranean or plantation style, or pleasing blends of the two styles. Housing seems to be very affordable. A&M has a small campus there, I’ll have to watch for when they hire a new biology faculty member.

Overall, we learned that the cheapest option for a weekend getaway - camping - is pretty unaccessible to us until we can either fix our tent or have older children or both.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

We are not cool, but we know how to stay cool.

It's official. All the things we said we'd never do, we have now done. The last things on the list were buy a van and have a DVD player in the car. After our only vehicle broke down last Saturday we finally decided to buy a van. It was on the todo list. We just pushed it up 8 months because it's really difficult to always be stranded at home with two kids, an old lady, and no way to escape. Anyway, we found a great deal on a slightly dinged up 2004 Honda Odyssey EX. It is awesome and we love it!!!


I have to say that the DVD feature is by far one of my favorite. It's almost like putting the kids in a cone of silence. 

We initiated our van by driving to the beach the day after we got it. We went to Quintana. What an awesome trip!!! I can't believe how well the AC works throughout the car. Also, it is extremely comfortable: Captains chairs, arm rests, great sound and entertainment, power seat, doors, window/locks...the works. Lots of space too. We had plenty of room for everything. So we removed the back row and took everything with us.

Ian really loves his sweet new ride too.

Playing on the beach and being there reminded of our great Lingard vacation there last summer. It was about the same time too. It was a perfect day. Bright, sunny, warm, and lots of good fun. Our time there was too short. Next time we will leave earlier in the morning. Our new job gives us more financial latitude so we can definitely make this trip more often.





Thursday, July 24, 2008

A Tribute To Matt


Matt is a wonderful husband and father. He is someone I look up to very much. His very essence inspires me to want to be more. I'm posting a little blurb on him because I am so proud of him. He recently received notification that he will be awarded a USDA grant to study rice. This is so exciting for our family. It is a great accomplishment on his part. These grants are very competitive and require tremendous effort just to submit. It's hard to do science. Research takes tremendous patience and perseverance. I call it "A lot of stick, no carrot". But Matt loves to do it and he's great at it. I love the example that he is for all of us and how tirelessly he works to promote our family's economic and spiritual well-being. 


Ian and Lily love their Daddy so much because he always plays with them.


Ian loves to wear his Daddy's clothes. I hope that he wants to be like his Daddy.


Lily gets so visibly and audibly excited when Matt comes home. She is a daddy's girl.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

All Fun, All The Time

Here are some of the boys at the pier in Redondo Beach. Brandon, Adam (Seanna's sons), and Davis (Craig's boy) were so great to Ian.



We went to the L.A. Natural History Museum with Seanna's family, Craig's girls, and my parents. We had so much fun there, saw dinosaurs and animals. Here's a shot of Brandon and Ian. He was a great helper with my kids.



Here we are in front of the T Rex and Triceratops skeletons in the museum rotunda.


July 1 was Adam Jolley's 8th Birthday. We had a great time because we got to go to Chuck E. Cheese. It was Ian's first time there and he loved it!!!





Here's Ian asserting his dominant position over his sister while exercising his God given right to mine his nose. Nice, Ian.



That's all for now. More updates to follow. Matt arrived in L.A. this morning and we are so happy he is here. We missed him terribly. It was four years ago on this day (July 4th) that Matt came to CA with me and he "busted a move" on me while cruising in my brother's boat. That's when I realized he liked me. Soon there after we were engaged. So the 4th of July for me also marks the beginning of the best part of my life.