The red coats are swarming!

Last week was my first class trip with Milo's school. A massive herd of 5-6 year-olds piled onto several buses and rode into the city center. They inundated the "cardboard cathedral," then moved on to Hagley Park. This photo is just Milo's individual class. I imagine that tree feels like the conifers in that mountain-top grove in Mexico, smothered in overwintering monarchs.

Last week was my first class trip with Milo’s school. A massive herd of 5-6 year-olds piled onto several buses and rode into the city center. They inundated the “cardboard cathedral,” then moved on to Hagley Park. This photo is just Milo’s individual class. I imagine that that tree feels like the conifers in those mountain-top groves in Mexico, smothered in overwintering monarchs.

Full disclosure: I did not take this gorgeous photo. A friend did. The "cardboard cathedral" (a.k.a. the "Transitional Cathedral") is so called because its laminated wooden structural supports are encased in gigantic cardboard tubes, like a castle made from paper towel rolls. You can kind of see it reflected fish-eye style in the ornament. The historic stone cathedral, wrecked in the earthquakes, is still mired in legal debate, a happy instance for the pigeons who inhabit the venerable rafters. The cardboard cathedral was constructed as a temporary substitute cathedral (the city is called christCHURCH for goodness sakes), but I think it hosts more tourists than anything else. Jeremiah's work party was even there one year.

Full disclosure: I did not take this gorgeous photo. A friend did.
The “cardboard cathedral” (a.k.a. the “Transitional Cathedral”) is so called because its laminated wooden structural supports are encased in gigantic cardboard tubes, like a castle made from paper towel rolls. You can kind of see it reflected fish-eye style in the ornament. The historic stone cathedral, wrecked in the earthquakes, is still mired in legal debate, a happy instance for the pigeons who inhabit the venerable rafters. The cardboard cathedral was constructed as a temporary substitute cathedral (the city is called christCHURCH for goodness sakes), but I think it hosts more tourists than anything else. Jeremiah’s work party was even there one year.  Now they’ve got a christmas tree with shiny ornaments.  Good thing God doesn’t really live in buildings, otherwise he might feel that his house was getting cluttered with burdensome traditions.  

Read those expressions--Proud, Proud, Proud.  Milo's proud to be a big brother, herding his little sister around.  Naomi's proud to be included in the big kid photo.

Read those expressions–Proud, Proud, Proud. Milo’s proud to be a big brother, herding his little sister around. Naomi’s proud to be included in the big kid photo.

Here's the swarm of red coats all together in the park!  Class trips seem to be a proof that the inevitable chaos of little bodies directed in a thousand directions by little minds does not always end badly.  To my knowledge, no little people were lost.  Heaven help the parents whose students are dressed in green uniforms.

Here’s the swarm of red coats all together in the park! Class trips seem to be a proof that the inevitable chaos of little bodies directed in a thousand directions by little minds does not always end badly. To my knowledge, no little people were lost. Heaven help the parents whose students are dressed in green uniforms.

And she’s off!

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A couple weeks ago we had one balance-biker and one pedal-biker. She’s been proficient on that balance bike for a year and a half, so that’s nothing particularly new. 

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Milo has been getting more and more daring on his bike, trying the off-road route here underneath the cool volcanic rocks in Govenor’s Bay.

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But then Naomi discovered a pedal bike at playcentre, hopped on, and wobbled off around the track.  Look at that grin–man, was she pleased with herself.  

Two weeks later, here she is, on a borrowed toy library bike:

There’s no stopping her now!

Well, unless she gets hungry, or tired, or for any other obstinate reason decides she’s not going to pedal.  Capability is all there, and usually the will there is too.

The trouble with monarchs

Monarchs are the panda bears of the insect world–everyone loves, them right?

Right.  Except if you’re in the peculiar position of trying to grow monarch fodder for customers who don’t want their plants pre-eaten.

As we are at Zealandia.

We’re wholesale plant growers.  We sell plants to big box stores like Mitre 10 and Bunnings (the NZ equivalent of Lowes and Home Depot).  Customers buy plants from these big stores to feed their own caterpillars, and don’t want to be buying more hungry mouths to feed with their plants.

We still love monarchs; everyone does.  But they present us with an interesting puzzle.

The roofs of our greenhouses open.  The wind and direct sun help keep the plants strong and stocky–but they also let in all manner of insects, including mama monarchs.  One of my jobs and the nursery is pest control, and when monarch caterpillars are eating our asclepias plants (what monarchs eat in NZ instead of milkweed) before we can sell them, that’s a problem.

I think we might try growing some big aslepias in the greenhouse, with the thought that mama monarchs might choose the biggest plants around on which to lay eggs, and leave our small ones alone.  Hey, it’s worth a try.

In the mean time, I got to bring home a big tray of caterpillar-laden plants.  We've distributed the gems to school and to neighbors, and planted a few plants in our garden in the attempt to grow some monarch food to feed the ravenous hordes later in the summer.

In the mean time, I got to bring home a big tray of caterpillar-laden plants.  We’ve distributed the gems to school and to neighbors, and planted a few plants in our garden in the attempt to grow some monarch food to feed the ravenous hordes later in the summer.

"We have a whole life cycle!" Milo exclaimed, delighted.  Hurray for the life cycle poster-child.  Every kid starts their entomology with these flashy specimens.

“We have a whole life cycle!” Milo exclaimed, delighted. Hurray for the life cycle poster-child. Every kid starts their entomology with these flashy specimens. (apologies for the out-of-focus white speck on the leaf–that’s an egg)

Next up, the tiny stripy babies.

Next up, the tiny stripy babies.

Eating and pooping makes the caterpillar grow, and complicated hormones govern each molting of the skin.

Eating and pooping makes the caterpillar grow, and complicated hormones govern each molting of the skin.

The caterpillar chooses a nice leaf to attach its bum to with super strong silk.  It curls up in a J and starts stewing in hormonal juice, forming a chrysalis skin under the old stripey one.  Soon the skin at the back of its neck splits open and the pupae wiggles and shrugs until the dry husk scootches to its silk-glue end.

The caterpillar chooses a nice leaf to attach its bum to with super strong silk. It curls up in a J and starts stewing in hormonal juice, forming a chrysalis skin under the old stripey one. Soon the skin at the back of its neck splits open and the pupae wiggles and shrugs until the dry husk scootches to its silk-glue end.

I have yet to actually see this shrugging off of the old skin in person.  You-tube is amazing.  After much twisting and turning, the pupae hardens and all motion stops.  Yet another hormone-mediated change is taking place.   We don't have any adult butterflies hatched yet, but if we catch any drying their wings, we'll have to put up a picture.

I have yet to actually see this shrugging off of the old skin in person. You-tube is amazing. After much twisting and turning, the pupae hardens and all motion stops. Yet another hormone-mediated change is taking place.
We don’t have any adult butterflies hatched yet, but if we catch any drying their wings, we’ll have to put up a picture.

November 14th Earthquake

It was technically November 14th when the latest big earthquake hit New Zealand, but being just past midnight the date wasn’t so salient in my mind.  “Wow, that’s a rolly one, and it is lasting a long time” I thought, then turned over and went back to sleep.

Anyone who had lived through the Canterbury quakes did NOT turn over and go back to sleep.  Their fear triggers are jumpy, and those near the coast wondered about a tsunami….then packed bags and evacuated when the tsunami sirens sounded.

Those with more earthquake finesse than me recognized that the rocking-rolling nature of the shaking meant the fault that moved wasn’t under Christchurch–quakes centered nearby tend to be more jarring, more of a slap bang than a rock and roll.  A few of the more astute observes wondered if the long-overdue alpine fault had gone.

It turns out that the quake was centered about 130 kilometers north of Christchurch near the small coastal town of Kaikoura.

There's a scenic road that runs along the east coast of the south island called Route 1.  It's a state "highway," believe it or not, and a major trucking route.  Jeremiah and I have a philosophical disagreement over the longevity of this road.  I think it'll fall into the ocean within the next few 100s of years, whereas Jeremiah has more faith in the engineering prowess of humans and thinks that we'll keep fixing it.  Optimist versus pessimist.  I wonder how long it'll take to fix it this time.

There’s a scenic road that runs along the east coast of the south island called Route 1. It’s a state “highway,” believe it or not, and a major trucking route. Jeremiah and I have a philosophical disagreement over the longevity of this road. I think it’ll fall into the ocean within the next few 100s of years, whereas Jeremiah has more faith in the engineering prowess of humans and thinks that we’ll keep fixing it. Optimist versus pessimist. I wonder how long it’ll take to fix it this time.

more road distruction.  Amazingly, no vehicles were squished.  The advantage of a midnight quake, perhaps.

more road distruction. Amazingly, no vehicles were squished. The advantage of a midnight quake, perhaps.

The tectonic plate on the Australian side is sliding under the plate on the east side of New Zealand, uplifting the southern alps, as well as    parts of the coastline.  Kaikoura has had big uplifts in the past, as the various "shelves" you can see on the coastal walkway attest.  This time we got another one--one report said there were areas where it popped up 6 meters!  (that's nearly 20 feet)  That will certainly be a nasty surprise for resident paua.

The tectonic plate on the Australian side is sliding under the plate on the east side of New Zealand, uplifting the southern alps, as well as parts of the coastline. Kaikoura has had big uplifts in the past, as the various “shelves” you can see on the coastal walkway attest. This time we got another one–one report said there were areas where it popped up 6 meters! (that’s nearly 20 feet) That will certainly be a nasty surprise for resident paua.

Man-made stuff looks pretty weak in the face of geological forces.

Man-made stuff looks pretty weak in the face of geological forces.

That trucker got lucky!

That trucker got lucky!

Wiggle wiggle.

Wiggle wiggle.

When you meet the parents…

Flour is sifting gently down onto our toes, encrusting the bottoms of our socks.

“No, Naomi!  It’s my turn to roll!” Milo insists as he yanks the cutting board with the hunk of cookie dough away from his sister.

Naomi takes a last swipe at the dough before it’s wrenched from her grasp, and licks her fingers.

“Naomi, go wash your hands in the bathroom,” I command.

“Ok” she agreed, leaving floury footprints on the blue carpet.

“Milo, hang on, be gentle.  Don’t just smash the dough with the rolling pin!”  I can feel my wrinkles deepening.  Phil Keaggy’s acoustic guitar broadcast through a tiny cell phone speaker isn’t enough to maintain my calm.

Earlier that morning Milo had delved into the corner cupboard and resurfaced with a miniature cook book in hand.  “Let’s make these cookies!” had he suggested, eagerly.  I had flipped through the book.  They all involved cookie cutters, piped icing,  sprinkles, and references to what “mum or dad” could do to help.  But I guessed that there was really no reason NOT to spend an hour or two baking.  First thing in the morning my patience would be at its highest apex…not that that’s super reassuring, knowing my low reserves of that commodity. 

Earlier that morning Milo had delved into the corner cupboard and resurfaced with a miniature cook book in hand.  “Let’s make these cookies!” had he suggested, eagerly.  I had flipped through the book.  They all involved cookie cutters, piped icing,  sprinkles, and references to what “mum or dad” could do to help.  But I guessed that there was really no reason NOT to spend an hour or two baking.  First thing in the morning my patience would be at its highest apex…not that that’s super reassuring, knowing my low reserves of that commodity.

“Ok, we can do that.” My lack of enthusiasm doesn’t dampen Milo’s zest at all.  “Just let me have a cup of tea first.”

I pulled the butter from the fridge and struggled to cut off a hunk.  “You’re going to use half of it!” Milo insisted.

“175 grams, yup,” I responded grimly.

Milo climbed up on the counter and reached for the microwave, apparently planning to open its door while balancing on one knee with a glass bowl of butter in his other hand as a counter weight.

“Hang on, hang on, hang on!  Let me do that!”  I remonstrated.

“My turn to stir!” Milo asserted, slopping the butter from one side to the other.

“No, my turn!” Naomi, never to be left behind, affirmed her rights.

“Stop, don’t pull!” I bark.  “You’ll have a turn after Milo!”  I scoop a cup of sugar.

“Can I dump that?”  Naomi sees her chance.

The bowl passes to Naomi.  “You’re not doing it right!” Milo, always the authority on everything, insists.  He leans over the bowl and Naomi turns her shoulder protectively.  The chairs they’re perched on wobble.

“Hey, stop pushing in!” I raise my voice, pulling on Milo’s shoulder.

Just then a teacher’s quote about PTA conferences pings in my mind.  “When you meet the parents, you forgive the child completely.” 

Sigh.

Life lessons

It's bed time, and boy was I read for it. I wanted a quick end to a sh**y day. Just as I was leaving his room, Milo goes "Mom, when are we going to move houses?"

It was bed time, and boy was I read for it. I wanted a prompt end to a sh**y day. Just as I was leaving his room, Milo goes “Mom, when are we going to move houses?”

“I don’t know when we’ll move next, Milo….why do you ask?”

“I wondered when I wouldn’t have to go to school with Charlie.”

“Oh.”  I turned around and sat down again at the foot of the bed.  “You know, Milo, you have to learn how to deal with people you don’t like.”

He grimaced.  “Charlie’s a silly boo-boo butt.  He’s always mean to me.”

I was familiar with the Charlie complaint, as it’s been the reoccurring school gripe for the past several weeks.  I don’t doubt that Charlie’s acting like a little twerp, but I’m also quite sure Milo is fully of twerpiness himself.  The two boys were best buddies a few months ago.  I’m not sure what happened, but the puzzle doesn’t seem to be solvable by the First Act of Defense taught to New Entrant students, namely, declaring in a clear and authoritative tone: “Stop it, I don’t like it.”  Of course, any antagonist knows that their object doesn’t like their teasing, that’s why they’re doing it.  Clearly.

“But you can’t just quit when you run into someone you don’t like.  Some day you’re going to have a job, what if you run into someone you don’t like there?  You can’t just quit your job all the time, then you wouldn’t have any money to buy food and pay for a house and take trips.  You have to learn how to cope with people you don’t like.  They you’ll win.”

Milo giggled.  He likes winning.

“Do you know, I didn’t used to be good at dealing with people I didn’t like either.  Then I got a job, and discovered that I didn’t like my boss, the one who tells me what I have to do.”

“Why didn’t you be the boss?” Milo wanted to know.

“Ha!  You don’t get to start out being the boss!”  My mind flitted to a certain type of entrepreneur who starts their own business just precisely so they don’t have to work for someone else…but no need to complicate the story.  “I didn’t like my boss because he wasted my time and he wasn’t fair and I didn’t like the decisions he made.”

Milo is all ears now.  “Why didn’t you go work for someone else, then?” he wanted to know.

“For me, there was no one else to work for in that town.  To work for someone else I would have had to move to a different town.  So I had to learn how to give him what he wanted, so he would give me what I wanted.  I gave him respect, and reports on time; he gave me independence.”

Milo giggled.  He also likes independence.  Probably even more than he likes winning.

“There are lots of other kids in your class, why don’t you play with someone else?”

“They’re all running around.”

“Well, you’re good at running, you can play that game.”

“They’re playing Thunderbirds.  I don’t know how to play Thunderbirds.”

“EVERYONE is playing Thunderbirds?  Even Emma?”

“Well, no… and not Ash.”  Milo’s mood seemed to be looking up.

“Ah, well, shall I check and see if Thunderbirds is on Netflix, and tomorrow maybe we can watch an episode?”

I got a big grin in response to that suggestion.

And the cats came back….

“And the cats came back!
Thought they were a goner,
but the cats came back
the very next day!”

Does anyone remember that kids’ song?  I don’t have any illusions about our kittens having as many lives as the adventurer of song, but nevertheless, they came back.

More precisely, they never really left.  Mommy cat just moved her brood to a different corner of the garage, to a box out of Milo’s reach.  Jeremiah noticed the mother leaving the garage one day about a week after they moved out of the bike trailer, put two and two together, and found the kittens after a little gentle rummaging.

I kept them a secret from the kids for a couple weeks, checking on them sneakily..."I'll be right back, kids, I just need to...get some meat from the freezer."  I didn't trust Milo to keep his hands off of them.

I kept them a secret from the kids for a couple weeks, checking on them sneakily…”I’ll be right back, kids, I just need to…get some meat from the freezer.”  I didn’t trust Milo to keep his hands off of them.

The Brotherhood went hunting one weekend and came back with a fine haul, which they cut up and packaged in our garage.  Mark has a soft spot for animals (don’t even try to figure out that oxymoron—hunter AND animal lover??), and he set aside scraps for the mama cat.  She was HUNGRY.  Deer, goat, pig; she relished it all.

It wasn’t too long after that when we had a friend over and I wanted to show them the kittens, but unfortunately Milo had just returned home from school.  I had a peak at them anyway, and their cover was blown.  But it seems that the mama (whom I’ve christened Genevieve, Jenny for short) tolerates more handling of her babies now that they’re older and sturdier.

All last week the kittens were clambering over the tower of boxes, Jenny sitting by, alert but apparently unconcerned about them toppling to their harm.  In the last couple days they’ve moved their residence down one shelf to Jeremiah’s dive gear bag, where they sleep when they’re not batting leaves around the floor or swatting strings hanging off the stroller.  Kittens really are wonderfully playful, and Jenny is wonderfully serene about their antics.  Somehow they don’t stray beyond her comfort zone, but if we take one out of the invisible boundary, she stalks along, keeping vigilant watch.  Good mommy.

Now that the kittens are a bit older Jenny must be going back to her old house to eat…or so I assume because she turns up her nose to venison now, and she’s fleshed out a bit.  I’m guessing the kittens were born about the first of October, which would make them something like 6 weeks old.  I hope they stay with us yet a while.

Deceitfulness of youth

Legs below a curtain, that's a bit suspicious, no?

Legs below a curtain, that’s a bit suspicious, no?

Cheerful electronic noises filter through the curtain. Naomi is ensconced with our friend's DS, illicitly playing video games. This is the first time I have noticed her being purposefully devious.

Cheerful electronic noises filter through the curtain. Naomi is ensconced with our friend’s DS, illicitly playing video games. This is the first time I have noticed her being purposefully devious.

Milo, on the other hand, is more practiced at the art of deception…if not any more skilled.

It wasn’t long ago that he came home from school and disappeared, which is atypical for him.  Usually he’s busy poking Naomi, littering the house with inside-out-socks and waving sticks near our faces.  This afternoon cheerful cartoon noises were emanating from beneath his bed.  I peaked under the quilt.  He had the laptop.  He had successfully navigated to netflix and was watching DinoTrux, but he hadn’t figured out how to turn the down volume to a whisper.

 

Visiting grandparents

“The Whiteheads are coming to visit,” I told Naomi and Milo.

“White Head?” Naomi crinkled her nose.  She thought it was a funny name.  I guess I probably thought the same, when I first heard it, but that was so long ago I can’t remember.  You see, Mrs. Whitehead was my first grade teacher.  AGES ago, I know.  And her oldest daughter, Kirsten, babysat us when we were little, changing my sister’s diapers if not my own.

The Whiteheads are in NZ visiting their daughter who married a Kiwi and lives in Auckland with their two grandsons, close to our kids' ages.  They were to be in Christchurch for one day before heading out on a whirlwind south island tour, so we snaffled them up for the afternoon, trotting them up and down the Harry Ell trail in the port hills before bringing them home for hard-earned dinner.

The Whiteheads are in NZ visiting their daughter who married a Kiwi and lives in Auckland with their two grandsons, close to our kids’ ages.  They were to be in Christchurch for one day before heading out on a whirlwind south island tour, so we snaffled them up for the afternoon, trotting them up and down the Harry Ell trail in the port hills before bringing them home for hard-earned dinner.

They’re veteran parents, veteran GRANDparents, and both former elementary school teachers.  We entered our house and the first thing they wanted to do, even before using the toilet, was to have the kids show them their rooms.  They admired everything, the chaos, the wall decor, even the animal heads.

“What’s this?” they asked, stroking the tahr’s mane.

“It’s a tahr, a kind of Himalayan mountain goat,” I said, a little apologetically.  I’m never sure how people are going to feel about the dead animals on our walls.

“It doesn’t have any penis!” Naomi announced.

“No, its penis got cut off!” Milo added, just to make sure Mrs. Whitehead understood what his little sister had said.

I started mentally scrambling for responses I might use to diffuse the situation (“That’s right, we leave the guts in the mountains”… OR  “Nope, it doesn’t have any meat on it anymore…”) while in my mind I wondered exactly what a tahr penis looks like…I suppose it does come off with the skin???

Mrs. Whitehead didn’t bat an eye.

After 45 years of kids, I don’t think a thing they can say would ruffle their feathers.

 

Flower children

It was a languid afternoon, drenched in sun, free of windy gripe, and since Jeremiah had put dinner to cook in the crock pot before leaving for work, I was free to enjoy the outdoors with the kids.  We sat on the porch eating popsicles and Milo started picking lawn daisies.

"Can you show me how to do a flower necklace like Chloe?"  He spent 30 minutes at least engrossed in the project, and was duly proud of the result.

“Can you show me how to do a flower necklace like Chloe?” I showed him how to gently split a stem and thread another one through the hole.  He spent 30 minutes at least engrossed in the project, and was duly proud of the result.

He then went on to sew a flower necklace for Naomi, who had decided that matching her hat color to her dress was more important than keeping the sun off her face.

He then went on to sew a flower necklace for Naomi, who had decided that matching her hat color to her dress was more important than keeping the sun off her face.

Oh, for more harmonious afternoons like this!