Now
that I have a teenager, birthday parties are a bit easier. Just get
them all together and provide pizza. What more do you need? Well, you
need *something*...
Enter the Teenage Scavenger Hunt. It
gives some of that craved independence (I let them go out on their own
in teams), puts those ubiquitous smartphones to good use (seriously, the
endless scrolling?!), and adds some fun (the laughs and smiles were
proof of that).
I scoured the internet for ideas. A compilation of the best I found,
plus my own ideas, resulted in what's provided here. (Plus some minor
improvements based on our experience!) Feel free to use as-is, or use as
a springboard for your own hunt.
As
the judge, my favorite definitely was the bonus "Gertrude the Llama"
video challenge. So hilarious. This was one stolen from somebody who
stole it from somebody else who was labeled as "Source Unknown." So,
thank you Source Unknown. It was brilliant. I'd link to you. Buuuut, you
know.
In coming up with your own scavenger hunt, here are some things to keep in mind:
Know your neighborhood. Tailor some hunting to what you know is in the area. For example, we live near a park, so having all team members go down a slide was one challenge.
Create a map. Set clear boundaries for the hunt. Ours was a seven-by-three block area to include two nearby parks, and to exclude crossing any major roadways.
Definitely have rules. Have a debrief with the teams before they leave to stress safety and respect. It's teenagers. So, quiz them before they go!
Have a dedicated team member whose phone number you have and who has yours. Along with being available for their questions or concerns, I could text them much-needed 15-minute and 5-minute warnings!
Other things to think about?
Timing. I did this between pizza and dessert. They could eat their dessert while I judged the results.
Stick to your guns.
The rules are your friend. Think about them, then stick to them. Teens
can be surprisingly competitive, and having rules to point to helps when
you have to disappoint one who's facing a loss.
Prizes. Gotta
be honest. I did not know what to do here. I can tell you that stickers
and bookmarks aren't all that desirable. But, for some reason, neither
was the mini Sasquatch (?!). Your comments on good teenage prizes (that
don't break the bank) are welcome for the next time I do this...
Team spirit.
I drew names at random to mix teens up and try to break up cliques.
Different colored bandanas served as team identifiers. Next time, I also
would have them come up with team names.
So there you go. Teenagers are simple. So is this game. Winner!
My kids are older, but the need to be silly in order to stay sane remains strong. That's true even as my oldest has now entered the teenage years with genetic-level sarcasm. And that's true especially during a pandemic (no need to explain that one if your calendar reads 2020).
Amid coronavirus-related shutdowns, all my work has come to a standstill. My writing fingers are positively twitching. So once again I find myself turning to this on-again, off-again blog.
The "C-O-O-K-I-E-S" song featured in this post has been knocking around my brain for over five years. I was pretty proud of myself when I came up with it, gotta say. I always thought I'd post it here, much like the hand-washing song (which, come to think of it, is sorta timely, even if it's more inspirational than instructional). Then the blog went on hiatus as life ebbed and flowed in other directions, and somehow making a video with a song that puts a kiddie spin on Todd Snider's "Beer Run" just didn't make the top priority slot. Go figure. But the song remained in the back of my head all that time like a true earworm, and I continued to nurture the half-baked dream of making a ridiculous video. Because, why the swearword not?
And, especially, why the swearword not now? I don't know about you, but I've been needing some epic-level stupid-silliness to outweigh the uncertainty and grief of these recent months.
Pandemic.
Protests.
Kids growing up.
Even my favorite family music artist, Caspar Babypants, announcing that he's done making albums. (In my silly daydreams, I always imagined him singing this song. And, let's be honest, when you observe the video, you will wish it was Chris Ballew singing the song too.)
I've been teaching my kids about covering coughs, washing hands, and observing physical distance rules.
I've been teaching my kids about justice, mercy, and love.
I've been teaching myself to loosen my grip on my kids, slowly but surely, to allow them to grow into their own.
But I'm also still teaching my kids, and myself, to smile -- every day, to find reason to smile.
Video time
So without further ado, I give you the world premiere of "C-O-O-K-I-E-S" in all its musical and technical glory. (I'm of the era of dancing hamsters and peanut butter jelly-loving bananas, so I'm feeling marginally OK about this product.)
Cookie time
Now that you're good and hungry, here are recipes for some of our favorite cookies:
Annnnnnd, the one our family has made more times than we can count, and thus what we now dub...
The Best Cookie Ever
from my Mom
Cream:
1/2 c butter
1/2 c creamy Skippy peanut butter
1/2 c sugar
3/4 c brown sugar
Beat in:
1 egg
1/2 tsp vanilla
Add:
1/4 tsp salt
1 tsp baking soda
1 c flour
1/2 c oats
Fold in:
1 c chocolate chips
Bake at 350 degrees F for about 10 minutes or just starting to lightly brown at edges. Cool on wire racks.
Do you have a favorite cookie recipe? Feel free to comment and share below. We can work off quarantine weight with family dance parties, hikes, gardening, and "vigorous housework."
a good lesson for the future mathematician and artist -- and perhaps a skill-building antidote for a trending perfectionist -- comes through Michael Hall's "Perfect Square," a picture book about a square whose life takes many unexpected turns.
It was a perfect square.
It had four matching corners
and four equal sides.
And it was perfectly happy.
But on Monday,
the square was cut into pieces
and poked full of holes.
It wasn’t perfectly square anymore.
this is sort of like Lego blocks. the girls get these amazing sets, build them according to the directions, and then play with them in their storytelling adventures -- great, great, great (or should I say awesome?). but just as great: them tearing it all apart and creating whatever wacky invention they can think up.
my youngest and i used the "Perfect Square" for some literal hands-on lessons. i took square sheets of paper, cut them up into random shapes, then challenged her to see what she could create out of them.
her favorite was a rocket ship.
she also created a mountain scene.
and then she convinced me that we didn't need a background page at all and constructed a paper sculpture of a river. (now that's thinking outside the box!)
it was a fun activity. and now that i think of it, i might just add it to our Summer Cups list of indoor fun. or save a large box and make it an outdoor patio activity. maybe even use a different shape... i'm starting to think like my kiddo rather than a rule-following adult. how perfectly awesome...
my husband appreciates a good whiskey, and happened to mention it once. so inevitably at Christmas time an in-law gets him a bottle or two. last year, a trio of The Glenlivet came to his "stocking" in a gift box. being a good Pacific Northwestern'r, i endeavored to take the box apart for the big green bin, but the cool magnetic closure didn't seem very recycle-friendly. meanwhile, i also had noticed how much our girls loved playing with a fold-up storytelling box
picked up at a garage sale. but there was only one, for two girls... hmm...
in this case, i had a can of gold spray paint ready to redeem the exterior of this box so no nosy nannies might wonder about my fitness for parenthood. you could also Modge Podge with some cool paper.
Step 3 - Set the Scene
i cut out nature scenes from magazines, traced the shapes, and cut and pasted them to fit inside. if i were to do it again, i would also mount several additional scenes on cardstock to fit snugly over top so that the girls can switch out scenes.
Step 4 - Pack Up & Go
stash your chosen characters inside the box, close 'er up and hit the road. perfect for hotel rooms and plane rides. if you do lose it, hey, you're not out too much, right?
the dinosaurs come alive every November. it's a mystery... we never know what they're going to get into. follow along with this year's Dinovember adventures on our silly = sane Facebook page.
in a certain sense, we are still on a fort hunt. that is, there's no permanent fort happening at the not-so-new house like there was at the old house (which, these days, is only a playhouse for mildewing leaves and creeping morning glory).
i take that back. if you count the hard plastic house variety, we do have a permanent fort. my fellow blogging mommy gave us their cast-off "log" house (score!). Sweet One has dubbed it her and sister's Little House in the Big City since we've been reading through the Little House books.
it also has been a fine Blueberry Cafe Drive-Thru, and a trial area for their decorating aesthetics that lean heavily toward floral accents.
but what i've discovered is that my girls' imaginations, for whatever reason, come most alive with indoor forts. and in that arena, our greatest success has been in the temporary fort.
we still occasionally do bedsheet forts in entire rooms.
a pop-up tunnel and square addition often make for handy escape routes and secret passageways for the sneaky Strawberry Pirates.
a large dining table and huge quilts make for quite an excellent cave (especially since we never seem to actually eat in the dining room anyway). LED candles help provide a "fire" for the giggly cave-dwellers.
there's a little nook under my computer station beside a metal filing cabinet that's perfect for magnet play.
we turned a large safe box into a cardboard house, complete with sloping roof, door, and mail slot.
(i sent them a welcoming note.)
and then there was my mommy genius moment -- cardboard bed forts.
we recently bought a new modular couch set. we figured we'd let the girls play with the giant boxes before collapsing them down for recycling. but they were gigantic and taking up way too much space. after eyeing them for a bit, a light bulb went off. they were exactly the width of a twin mattress.
and the bed fort was born.
i slipped the mattress into the box to hold it in place. Small One wanted to be able to close the "door" flap on hers. for Sweet One, we taped the box so it would stay open, but dangled a sheet over that she could use to close herself up. they decorated and re-decorated with markers and glow-in-the dark stars. it made bed time something to look forward to! Small One named her bed fort her "AlonE SlEEPy" place.
then they got tired and bored one day and proceeded to rip them apart.
but, hey, that's ok... the recycling bin is where the boxes were destined to go anyway. free fun, and no hard feelings when the toy finally "broke"... well, ok, maybe i felt a twinge of sadness for seeing my awesome idea finally meet its end.
now i'm wondering when we'll see another big cardboard box, and what fort idea it may bring next time...
beyond the fun and pre-engineering skills it brings, i am liking the temporary fort approach for purely mommy reasons too. namely, being content with the simple in the midst of a very busy time in life.
i love giving my girls imaginative play spaces. when we were looking at buying our current house, part of what drew me were the grand visions in my head of turning the garage attic into a kids' wonderland with twisting tube slide exit... or turning the house attic into a giant playroom with cozy book nook overlooking the Cascade Mountains... clearly, that hasn't happened, and isn't likely too. my imagination often outpaces reality and logistics. ... and they were far-off places. is it really that surprising that my girls' favorite fort places are usually under my feet or only the next room over? i'll miss that desire for nearness when they inevitably hit puberty and seek to make themselves scarce.
those grand attic ideas are still in my head. but the girls are growing up fast. and sometimes dreams are just that -- and that's ok. even as an adult. a cardboard box is a castle, you know.
after going through several theme ideas since the conclusion of her last birthday (kites, rainbows, princesses), Sweet One at the last moment settled on a "Frozen" theme based on the hit Disney movie. i am sure all mothers of young girls out there are shocked, shocked i say. here is where we ended up with our "Frozen" birthday party...
the cake
i think i can claim this one as my own. at least, i haven't seen it done yet. this is a gelatin "ice" castle cake, using a dollar store sand-castle pail as a mold, white grape juice as the liquid, and fancy sugar sprinkles for the additions that make it sparkle and give it that ethereal North Mountain feel (if not nearly the exact look... i'm not that crazy, and thankfully my daughter is not that literal). see the separate gelatin "ice" castle cake recipe post for the full how-to...
the rest of the menu
we followed a largely blue-and-white theme on the food front, including...
yogurt frozen pops (vanilla yogurt with pureed blueberries, poured into Dixie cup molds with lollipop stick handles)
carrot "snowman noses" with ranch dressing dip
white chocolate-covered pretzels
frozen blueberries
popcorn
marshmallow snowflakes, and "snowballs" made from the extras
my dear friend Krista introduced me to the wonders of homemade marshmallows on a gourmet camping trip (i provided the homemade graham crackers). and ever since i have found that i actually like marshmallows! i never was a fan of the store-bought ones. part of the allure is, of course, the ability to adjust the flavor as desired. i religiously use the Smitten Kitchen marshmallow recipe. for the birthday party, i used half vanilla and half almond extract for flavoring. yum, yum. some of them i coated in sugar that i had mixed with blue food coloring.
if i had to do it over, i would use the snowflake cookie cutter and make actual cut-out cookies. using the cookie cutter on the marshmallows wasn't very exact and they ended up looking more like stars than snowflakes.
the kids liked the blueberry-yogurt frozen pops the best. which was awesome, because it was the healthiest thing on the menu. ha! take that, sugar high! although, speaking of sugar high...
the activities
we joined a popular "Frozen" party activity by making marshmallow snowmen. we used homemade marshmallows, pretzel sticks, dark chocolate chips, and baby carrots cut down to size for noses. kids made their snowmen as they arrived or in between snacking.
full credit for our single party game goes to my creative friend Aryn and, more specifically, her epically brilliant young daughter, who is even more enamored with "Frozen" than my girls. little Rayne had the awesome idea of playing freeze tag. and to unfreeze a player? you have to give them a hug! oh, Olaf would be so proud... and, it is the perfect way to run off a sugar high! just let it go, girls. let it go...
the prizes
i put in my online order way too late. and even with going to a record-breaking eight stores in a single day trying to make up for such bad planning (two stores in a day is my usual emotional limit), i still didn't find what i had planned for the treat bags. the key missing prizes were blue rock candy sticks and sparkly snowflake stickers. making your own rock candy takes two weeks, and i definitely didn't plan things that far in advance. the snowflake stickers at the "Frozen"-train-riding craft store were stupid expensive (keep in mind, we're still in the stick-the-stickers-into-one-amorphous-pile stage, here). so instead we ended up with some primo blue and white candy from our local sweets shop: birthday cake-flavor coated caramels, and blue raspberry burst gummies. some Disney "Frozen" brand stickers that were reasonably priced. and we topped it off with a great find from Sweet One at the dollar store: bubble wands in the shape of blue microphones! perfect for a "Let It Go" singalong... and i don't need to tell you that a singalong did ensue with little girls clutching these microphone bubbles, with no prompting whatsoever. i got a deal earlier on the soundtrack for our "entertainment," although as most of you can probably guess, the girls needed no help with the lyrics for their bubbly singalong...
the decorations
no big decorating here. just a couple six-point snowflakes cut from white and silver paper, then placed on a blue tablecloth. there are several instructions online for creating six-pointed snowflakes, such as here.
to highlight it all, though, i went for a giant sparkly 3-D snowflake made from a silver-foil gift bag using these instructions and suspended it from the light fixture, centered prettily above the cake.
below you'll find affiliate links to some of the products i recommend for Amazon shoppers looking to replicate our "Frozen" birthday party:
Sweet One requested a "Frozen"-theme birthday party. i always aim to do something a little special in the cake department. but how to fit this theme? we went to a fun "Frozen" Princess Tea at her Gramie's church, where they served cupcakes with crystal-blue frosting and sparkly sprinkle toppings. i thought about doing the same, maybe displaying them on an ice castle (my friends joked they expected to see me outside with a chainsaw hacking up a giant block of ice... if i wasn't so prone to cutting myself with a friggin' paring knife, they may not have been so far off). but, more than safety concerns, you can't eat ice. or, at least, it's not very nutritional. then i remembered the eye-opening "of course" experience i had applying Mason Jar Values' healthy, homemade Jell-O recipe (try strawberry-banana Odwalla... mmmmmm). then, it hit me. gelatin can totally look like ice! a gelatin "ice" castle cake... i was on a mission. and here are the happy results. but can you guess what made it a real success? and, in the world of the blogosphere, it's worth saying i really mean this... it's the same measure of success i get each year as my dear Sweet One grows and grows -- from balloon-enthralled pre-walker to chit-chatty first-grade girly girl -- the smile on her face. "my Mom is the best cooker ever!" sniff, sniff. i'm gettin' all melty over here. and of course she's worth it.
the preemptive notes, in the lead-up to the actual recipe:
this is very easily adapted. use whatever juice you like, or just water if you care only about a pure "ice" look and not so much about any nutritional value. after some earlier experiments, however, i do urge you to stick to using a sand castle pail and not the smaller sand-castle forms out there, since the pails stand solidly flat on their own. i tried some cute little forms during a trial run, propping them level with an assortment of napkins and wash clothes and office clips. good night. all that, and they didn't really work. also, even if your chosen forms can stand on their own, be sure to check for small holes (actual sand castle forms typically have them for water to drain out, and gelatin will drain out just as easily!). wash in your dishwasher before use to sanitize. mine held up fine, even on the bottom rack.
how big a pail? this recipe is based on a sand castle pail i bought at the dollar store. i eye-balled the size compared to past gelatin adventures and, remarkably, estimated correctly. in this case, four 9-by-13 pans worth of gelatin snack recipes (think knock-off Jell-O) filled this pail perfectly. if you end up with too much, add the leftovers to a pan and let firm up in the refrigerator as some extra snacks. if you end up with too little, it's no problem to mix up some more and add to the top. gelatin is very forgiving.
the color of your sugar crystals matters. i expected the blue sugar crystals to keep their exact look suspended in the gelatin. however, as soon as colored sugar gets wet, all the color comes off. in our case, this ended up creating a very cool blue-green effect when mixed with the slightly yellow white grape juice gelatin mixture. it was a happy accident and ended up turning out better than i had envisioned.
deciding when the gelatin is "semi-firm" is a tricky business. what i suggest is doing things in waves. check at the first hour by sprinkling some sparkles on the surface. they will very likely sink right away, which means it's not technically semi-firm yet, but you're still adding some nice additions to the top of your castle, which you won't be able to reach by the time it is all semi-firm anyway. after the first hour, repeat every half-hour until you're satisfied with your additions. by the end, you'll be using the handle of your spoon to depress the additions into the mold by only a couple inches. don't worry about hole-poke marks; the gelatin will ooze back over itself if it's still semi-firm, like some kind of primordial goop. which leads to the next consolation: this is a very forgiving stage of things. don't really have time to check every 30 minutes? don't sweat it. gelatin knows no stopwatch, especially when it's this big a batch.
the finished product can tend to be rather "runny," especially when dealing with a larger batch like this. if i had to do it again, i would have put a clean white rag down flat on top of the serving tray and invert the mold on top of that. it would still look like "snow" and serve the double purpose of soaking up some of the runny liquid so that the confectioner's sugar doesn't dissolve into a soupy mess. as an easy alternative, though, just do what i did and add the confectioner's sugar at the last moment.
make room in your refrigerator if you can manage it so that the empty pail mold and tray can be set on a shelf with enough head space above to pour the liquid in and, later, stir in the additions. the less you have to move the pail o' gelatin, the better. trust me. let's just say i was up until 12:30 a.m. after spilling one-quarter of this mixture on the floor during one of the more involved addition-stirring rounds. the upside? if you do spill some, it's easy enough to mix up more gelatin mixture and add on top of what didn't spill out with no ill consequence. a dessert that forgives as well as tastes and looks good? thank your birthday stars, mommas!
Gelatin "Ice Cake" recipe Ingredients
16 packets gelatin (about 16 T)
120 liquid ounces white grape juice (e.g., one 96 oz jug, plus 24 oz bottle)
Additions of choice: we used blue sugar crystals and clear, sparkly sugar sprinkles
Confectioner's sugar
Materials
Sand castle pail form (dollar store size used in this recipe)
Tray
Wooden spoon
Serving tray or cake stand
Steps Note: The making of the gelatin itself follows the basic recipe for making four batches of gelatin snacks, decreasing the liquid by 1/4 cup per batch, so 1 cup less liquid total.
1. Heat 11 cups juice to boiling.
2. Meanwhile, pour 4 cups juice into a large bowl. Sprinkle gelatin over top and let stand to soften while the other juice boils, 1 minute or more.
3. Set the pail on a tray and position in or near the refrigerator (see notes above). Coat interior of pail well with cooking spray.
4. Add hot juice to gelatin mixture. Hand-stir for 5 minutes.
5. Pour mixture into pail mold. Refrigerate.
6. Check firmness at one-hour mark, then every hour or half-hour beyond that (see notes). Add additions as desired. Gelatin is semi-firm when additions sit on top of the mixture but you can still use the handle of a wooden spoon to poke the sprinkles and crystals down into the mixture.
7. Continue to refrigerate for 3 hours or overnight.
8. Invert pail of gelatin cake onto serving tray or cake stand, on top of a white cloth if available (see notes). Sprinkle confectioner's sugar around the castle like snow. Sprinkle more sparkly sprinkles or blue sugar crystals over top of confectioner's sugar and castle, as desired.
i set this castle on our kitchen table, where we were going to put the food. this room happens to have some tall windows, and the effect was gorgeous. it sparkled all on its own! if you don't have the advantage of natural light indoors or a sunny day outdoors, consider sticking a little battery-powered LED light into the bottom. that was my back-up option. if you try it, please please please leave a comment to let us know how it worked...
to add a candle on top, i stuck the pointy end of a wooden skewer into the bottom of the candle, broke off the skewer to length and gently impaled the castle. it worked quite well. and, more important of course, it was a special request by Sweet One.
the self-conscious blogger in me would like to note that i had ordered some high-quality gelatin and colored sugar online but it didn't arrive in time. that said, Winco and Wilton's worked just fine. anyone who's done research on gelatin or had more experience with large batches of different varieties, please share your findings in the comments! (also, have I ever mentioned that i think the cow is the greatest animal on earth?)
below you'll find affiliate links to some of the products i recommend for Amazon shoppers looking to replicate our "Frozen" gelatin ice cake and other party features:
i am currently sitting in the children's section of our local library as my girls pile up book after book on the table in front of me -- lots of Barbie, Thomas, Marley and Fancy Nancy so far, along with Sciezka's Trucktown. so it seemed appropriate to, belatedly, share one of Sweet One's and my favorite new library discoveries: Wait and See, by Robert Munsch (he of Love You Forever fame).
it's Olivia's birthday and she makes a wish -- a BIG wish -- which instantly comes true, setting off a cascading series of events involving multiple birthday cakes and candles, wishes, wooshes, and bigger and bigger payoffs (though not for everyone's benefit). parents will appreciate some of the humor tucked in here ("I don't think you understand how this works..."), while children will appreciate the magic of pure adolescent triumph. Michael Martchenko's illustrative interpretations add to the book, as humorous as Munsch's words (those neighbors put up with a lot, you can tell).
like many of our most recent book picks, this story started as a storytelling adventure, until Munsch finally settled on this published version. it certainly is a story that reflects that origin, and you imagine the kind of fun he had creating it with each new group of little listeners.
if wishes were horses, my daughters certainly would wish for ponies right now (Olivia does not). me? i'd wish for Olivia's next-to-last wish, the one involving a dump truck (no spoiler here), for the flexibility it'd provide to fulfill so many other petty yet delightful wishes (like the luxury of never doing dishes again). what about you?
the flu is going around and slacker me hit panic mode and brought the girls in for the vaccine today, the latest i've ever gone. i had figured it was too late. turns out it's not. Sweet One asked why we needed to do this. i was sick of answering the question like a first-grade scientist. so i went with the simple explanation: "we get a poke so we don't puke."
the explanation worked, and off we went. the girls did great. they looked at a calendar picture of a puppy while they got their squeeze-n-poke. and, hey, there's stickers. you can't argue with the lure of stickers. i will never understand that. the stickers rarely last. it's not uncommon, in fact, for them to end up on the floor of the car before we get home. and yet... "oooh! stickers!" hey, whatever works. i don't need a sticker. i did, however, need that puppy to look at. needles freak me out. but like spiders, i can kick that duty's arse if my girls are around. i morph from wimpy me into Super Mom. "just watch Mommy, sweeties, there's nothing to it."
ah, cassettes. i can still summon the feeling of black plastic ridges on my fingertip as i imagine re-winding the black tape that, inevitably, came loose in my crappy tape player. i still have a Heart cassette somewhere. and remember mixed tapes? i rocked Paula Abdul on one of mine. in college, a friend made me a mixed tape of electronica—it was on a cd, but we called it a mixed tape anyway. that mix of nostalgia and habit stayed with me into the era of mp3's and Pandora. i can't get used to this whole "playlist" lingo, despite its grammatical superiority. so for this first silly = sane mix, i'm sticking with old-school—it's a mixed tape we're offering up here. on the blog, anyway. on our YouTube channel, of course, a playlist it shall forever be.
our inaugural theme is all about bodies, and not just that kiddie stuff of head, shoulders, knees and toes(although that's there too). we've got blood and guts, boys and girls. not to mention a bodily function thrown in for good measure.
find the list of songs below with links to music files (affiliate links on Amazon). head on over to the YouTube channel for the free version with our bodies in motion playlist. (parents, take care. i don't put ads on my videos, but others do and they are not always appropriate for children. most of these videos do not have ads. but some do, both overlay banners and commercials you have to click to skip. so be aware of that...)
Animaniacs, "Bones in the Body" A Japanese show to apparently help children learn English: "Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes"
since this is a YouTube-driven playlist, there are a few that would be on a normal mix but didn't make this particular cut. a few more songs we like in the bodily theme:
Caspar Babypants, "Them Bones" (only 50 cents on his website! no, i'm not paid to tell you this. we're just big fans!) Ralph's World, "Finger is the Singer" Justin Roberts, "Get Me Some Glasses"
every year, writer Refe Tuma and his wife devote the month of November to convincing their three young children that their plastic dinosaurs come to life. they take a snapshot, capturing the feisty fossils in various escapades (jamming, getting into the candy jar, unrolling the TP, breaking stuff, interrogating Michelangelo the TMNT, and occasionally cleaning up after themselves). i came across Tuma's post at Medium, and then quickly became a fan of Dinovember on Facebook as the fun concept went officially viral. "Childhood is fleeting, so let’s make sure it’s fun while it lasts," Tuma writes. amen! i dove right in. (and thus ends a too-long hiatus from this blog. i have many drafts that have remained just that. i promise to bring them to light soon. they involve mixed tapes and slugs. and maybe some silly-sanisms or two. but back to the dinosaurs...)
my cousin gave me her son's hand-me-down Dinosaur Train figures. Sweet One and Small One love this show. my oldest gets excited to tell me about what she's learned. my youngest giggles. we sing the song. it's good times. so now the familiar dinos are breaking out of the toy cupboard while the girls sleep.
the first night, the dinos decided to get all crafty and make secret messages to hide in the girls' lunchboxes. they snapped a photo mid-action (see above) and sent it to Mommy to share with the girls. at first, the girls were convinced this was daddy's doing (sigh). then the idea that dinosaurs came to life while they were sleeping really set in, and Sweet One became Detective Sweet One. "i have to figure this out!" she commenced to steal the camera while i was finishing up dinner and took some video. then she snapped photos of evidence.
yes, a photo of a photo
she interviewed suspects.
ok, maybe just one suspect
she tried to determine their next target.
not the pumpkins!
for a while she was plotting to sneak downstairs in the middle of the night and catch them in the act again. but then we reminded her of the consequences for getting out of bed. so she shifted tactics, and instead left the dinos some notes of her own. the dinos did not disappoint...
this time, they raided Small One's Basket of Things That Go. ho, boy...
something tells me these dinos are enjoying their life brought back from the brink of extinction. (hand-me-downs rock!)
something tells me this cryolophosaurus is going
to be trouble. sigh. theropods will be theropods...
the look on this kentrosaurus' face ... and the fact that he's
riding backwards ... lead me to think he may not be the brightest
stegosaurid in the Jurassic time period
the ornithomimus checks under the hood of the '64 Dodge
(darn if that one isn't always failing to turn over for Little One),
while a velociraptor gives some velocity to the wind-up bug
there was no tank for Tank.
so the triceratops settled for the dozer.
the pteranodon siblings race.
Tiny is on a Mini... snicker
a mini maiasaura gets a lift
phew! no crash landings. Buddy the little T-rex shows he may
just belong in a pteranadon nest after all
what will they get into next time...? watch the silly = sane Facebook page for more of our Dinovember photos.
climbing back into the toy cupboard to sleep off
the mayhem... and plot their next move...
how about you? are you participating in Dinovember? don't have dinosaurs? how about Barbies, or princesses, or army men, or Lego dudes... the possibilities are endless, really. let your imagination go wild, and then watch your kids' imaginations blossom too.