Tuesday, 22 October 2013

Camping in America

I'm having a horrible time cutting down the pictures from our US trip - so I might drag out the one post into a few categories... and the first thing we did after we got to America was go camping.

Finn was AMAZING on the flight over. I can't believe how good he was.  It was an 8 hour flight during the day and the seatbelt sign was on the entire time so we couldn't get up EVER (though we did, once, for a nappy change).  He played, read books, coloured, watched the films, sang songs - and stayed in his seat happily the WHOLE time.  I was so worried about travelling alone with him, but I didn't need to be.  He seemed to know that we were on an airplane and therefore had to sit still, and so he did.  I got so many compliments after the flight about how good he was.  Which is good because I think people were a bit worried when we got on!  He did cry once, when it was naptime and he couldn't get comfortable - but that only lasted about 10 minutes and then he was asleep.  He was great in the airports for the layover, and on the second flight - and all the return flights... he's just so so good at understanding when he can be crazy and wild and when he can't.  Amazing.

But anyway, the flight was good, the jet-lag wasn't too bad, and the first thing we did was go to a campground.  At first it was just my Mom and Dad and me and Finn but we were joined by my sister's family that evening and stayed for four days.  It was an excellent time and I have so many pictures!  Here are just a choice few:


Finn loved the fact that the campground had a train!  So we went on a little ride one day:


He also loved that his cousins brought their little car for him to play with.  He LOVED that little car and spent a LOT of time in it (much to the dismay of Caitlin who wanted just the tiniest of turns every now and then!).

(I love that picture!  It's like he's bored wating in traffic!)

He loved hanging out with his grandparents and having lots and lots of walks and exploring time (including a trip through the woods to the side of the highway to look at the trucks going past... all the amazing things the campground had to offer, and Finn was super excited to see a road!)



But most of all he loved spending so much time with his two beautiful cousins Caitlin and Dakota:


He had SO much fun with them and loved being around them as much as he could. We did lots of fun things together including trips to see some farm animals, swimming, more swimming, playing at the park, riding bikes, arts and crafts, and playing with some fun fake snow that I brought along. They were so serious with their scooping and stirring!  It was brilliant to watch them, AND it kept them busy for a nice long time :):



And of course after all the excitement there was a lovely bed in a campervan for a snooze.
 


All in all it was such an excellent time.  I had been getting a bit stressed at work just before we came over and there was so much to do on the flat all the time, and then packing for the trip and it was all go, go, go... and then I get there and we're at a campground with no phone, no internet, nothing pressing that I needed to get done.  Finn went down for a nap and my first thought was "I'm so tired, but I need to use this free time as much as I can!"  and then realised that I didn't.  There was nothing that needed done, no one was waiting on my decisions, everything was taken care of.  And I could do whatever I wanted.  It was like I could all the sudden breathe again!  I got a book, a diet Coke, a pillow and went and read in the hammock and then had a nap.  Bliss.
I didn't realise how much I needed that until I had it. Certainly a great start to the trip, that's for sure!!!


To be continued...
:)

Sunday, 20 October 2013

23 months old!

So, we already covered most of August - James and Finn went to the Isle of Man!
And the end of August into the beginning of September, Finn and I went to America (isn't he a lucky chap?).  But that trip gets its own post, so this is about everything else.  Firstly, on the 2nd, Finn turned 23 months old!  We were at the zoo, in Ohio (more later.  It was brilliant.) so his picture is a bit odd. But here they are side-by side!
22 months old
23 months old


Before I get into his 23 month update though, I need to go back to the picture of him at 22 months.  Because we got these gems that I didn't share!  Firstly is his brilliant ability (that I might have shown before) to do the traditional "funny face" that on him is oh-so-funny!


Secondly, Finn LOVES the camera.  But not so much to have his picture taken, more to take them and see them on the screen etc - he seems to think it's hilarious to see Mama in person and on the screen at the same time.  So we sometimes will amuse him by taking pictures that he can then see. Usually we delete them straight after, but sometimes we capture some actually nice pictures!


Also, I would like to point out one more thing that is one of my multiple excuses for late blogs or lack thereofs.  I got really ill!  Like proper puking ill.  And you know how much Finn cared that I was ill?  Not at all.  He still wanted to be on me or next to me constantly. Brilliant.  James thought it was funny enough (not so funny later when he caught it!) to take our picture...



So the update!  I don't know how much he weighs even though I weighed him in America... I've since forgotten.  And I don't know how tall he is, but he's quite small on both accounts.  He can still fit into a lot of his 12 - 18 month clothes, though to be fair he is also too big for some of his 2-3 year clothes, so sizing is all relative really!  But he is often thought to be much younger than he is.  Which is quite funny sometimes when people compliment him on how clever he is, or how well he speaks, or how good he is at walking and then ask how old he is and immediately start back tracking :) Nothing like following a compliment with "oh!  I thought he was much younger!" So not only do you no longer think he's clever, but that he also looks like a tiny little baby-child!?  Luckily, I mostly just find it very funny.  Neither James or I are very tall.  Let's just face the fact that Finn is pretty doomed.
Part of what makes him look young though, is his hair!  I got asked by another mum not too long ago how often I have to cut his hair to keep it "so short."  She was shocked to hear that we have never cut his hair and that was literally all he had ever grown in his ENTIRE LIFE!  Which is not to say that I don't think it's amazing how much he has!  He's getting more!


So much so that we are thinking that we need to cut it.  It's very very fine, but actually quite long on top (though only on top... which is odd).  We've tried to give it a trim, but Finn thinks the comb is way too cool to let anyone use it but him.  And he is not very good.  So we haven't managed yet.  But I think we can be patient... It's not like it's unruly or hanging in his eyes or anything!

So what are the things he most loves at the moment (or at the past moment, remembering that I'm talking about a month ago, not now... though it hasn't changed much...)?

He still LOVES his trains



And luckily his father also loves his trains and they have a great time building really elaborate tracks with lots of bridges and tunnels (Finn's favourite things when it comes to trains - he would have the whole track be bridges and tunnels if he could!).

I don't know if I ever mentioned where this stuff came from but we were on a walk one day and I took a detour to see the stuff drop-off point on the local estate.  It's the place where anyone in the area can put big stuff that they don't want anymore and the council will take it away.  Before we moved I was always checking it out - and judge as you may, we have two or three bookcases, a couple chairs, a table, some toys and probably more I don't remember that came from there!  AND we have a very big box full of trains and train track.  Someone got rid of their kid's entire collection and we picked it up, took it home, cleaned it up and have been enjoying it thoroughly ever since.  There was literally over £100 worth of track (those little pieces of wood are weirdly expensive) and we just picked it up. I refuse to let anyone judge me for the amount of stuff I get from the bins!! We would never have been able to afford enough bits to make something like this otherwise:

Anyway! I digress!  So I pick things up from the side of the road.  Moving on.
Another thing that Finn loves is playing with his friends.  I still find it odd that children so young (and before they can even communicate) can have actual 'friends' and best friends at that.  But they do. There are twins at Finn's nursery.  He has known them both the same amount of time and isn't ever anywhere with one and not the other.  And yet he can't stand being around one of them and will ignore him completely and pretend he's not there.  And the other?  Finn will shout his name and jump up and down when he sees him.  So he knows who he likes and very much has friends.
AND best friends.  He has two that I would consider his best friends.  One is Conrad.  Conrad is Finn's number one favourite person in the world (besides family). Conrad hasn't appeared in this blog, but only because I haven't asked his parents yet if they are ok with me putting pictures of him up.  Other than that, he would be in nearly every post. Conrad and Finn greet each other with shouts of glee each morning.  Conrad usually gets to nursery first and he always carries two cars until Finn gets there, and then he gives him one and they run off together to find some more.  When we leave nursery, Finn has to say a specific goodbye to Conrad before we can go.  The joy that the two of them find in each other is a beautiful thing to watch. The other day Finn was sad because Conrad wasn't at nursery when he got there (we were actually on time for once!) but then his mum sent me a text saying that she dropped Conrad off and Finn "burst into an excited laugh as a welcome." Which was good because apparently Conrad had asked three times on the way to nursery "Finn coming?" When she left "they were sitting in a corner chatting and taking each others shoes and socks off." I love the relationship they have with each other and am so so pleased that James and I really enjoy Conrad's parents as well!  We've obviously arranged quite a few playdates and they are just plain lovely people.  I think Finn just has really good taste :)

One of his other best friends is Lily.  He has two friends named Lily, actually - both of which he loves to be around.  But it causes great confusion when we tell him we're going to see 'Lily' and he's clearly imagined the wrong one... But anyway, one of the Lilys (Lilies?) is an utter utter genius child.  As in literally she floors you with her cleverness.  She's one month older than Finn and can speak in sentences (in three languages) and is just beginning to read (as in she can recognise letters and knows her name when she sees it).  She's brilliant.  Which is kind of nice because there is no competitiveness that is possible because she and Finn are on completely different playing fields!  But they really love each other (and again, we LOVE her parents - which is amazing!) and we spend a lot of time with them (she's appeared in this blog a few times before).  These are from a picnic - when it was still warm enough to have one!
 


 When not compared to Lily, Finn is very good with language now.  The trouble is, James and I (and sometimes only me) are the only ones to understand him.  So he has a very clear understanding about language and words representing things, it's just that the words he chooses are not always that close to the words that other people use!  But sometimes he doesn't seem to even realise that he's not saying the same thing... he's decided that the word for milk is ""bah" (actually closer to something like sbghah) and no matter what, even when repeating after you, THAT is the word for milk.  He doesn't seem at all aware that you are saying two different things.  In his mind they are one and the same:

There are other examples as well - it's a bit odd.  But he's consistent and clear once you know the code!

He does delight in language though, and often will parrot people as they talk, even if he doesn't know what they are saying.  This offers endless fun in getting him to say all sorts of fun things like
'Leeloo Dallas Multipass", or "Dee-dah's a bogie." (which is another thing that confuses people.  In Finn's world James=Dee-dah.  Daddy=Taxi.  I am Mama and Mummy=Money.  So if he's talking about Daddy and Mummy then he's taking a journey somewhere...).

One of his favourite things to do with language is to make up songs.  He's always singing and loves to sing whatever comes to his mind.  It's very hard to capture this on video without him stopping but here are a couple good examples:
 

The other thing he loves to do is to read and be read to.  He LOVES books and will spend ages finding just the right one on his shelf before settling down to look through it.  One of his favourite books is his big Thomas the Tank Engine one.  It's old school Thomas and has lots of beautiful drawings that Finn could spend forever just looking through, and often does.



His other loves include tents and houses (like all toddlers!).  This morning we had a great time in a living room tent (or 'tunnel' as he calls them) having a tea party with a teddy bear.  You know, I used to have quite specific ideas about what was "fun" and a "good use of time." I never would have believed you if you'ld told me that I would one day think that sitting under a blanket suspended between two chairs pretending to drink tea with stuffed animals was as near to the peak of happiness that I could reach. But there you have it.
Here are some more great memories of a little tiny box house that was small but hugely enjoyed:



Although Finn does very definitely love tea parties and houses - he also likes tools.  I think I mentioned before about his constantly wanting to help with DIY, and loving tools of all sorts.  One of his favourites is my drill.  He really really likes the drill.  So I found him a drill of his own and he "helps" me when I'm drilling, as in this video (I'm practising on a spare piece of tile before I drilled into our beautiful bathroom walls, by the way - not randomly drilling into the floor...)


And his other favourite 'tool' is still the hoover.  I don't know why he loves that thing so much (I certainly don't)!  But he does.  So much so that when I decided to use his bath time as a chance to tidy up, he immediately climbed out to hoover instead (and he loves his bath, so I was amazed!).  But it was certainly interesting to say the least!



And on that note I think I will leave you!  I'll try to get the next bit up as soon as I can.  But it's already midnight and I. Am. DONE.
But hopefully you all feel a little bit more up-to-date on the world of Finn :)
Later!


Saturday, 19 October 2013

I know, I know!

For a blog that has a worldwide readership of, like, 12, I certainly get a lot of flack when I don't update!

But I haven't updated in a while because there was just TOO MUCH to say, so I wanted to wait until I had the time to say it, at which point there was MORE and I needed MORE TIME etc etc.  So I've just been putting it off because of the behemoth it had become.

But the best way around that is to just break it down into smaller chunks and just go with it.  If I forget stuff, I forget it, at least I'm back to breaking even instead of trying to catch up with myself. 

So there are a lot of posts coming (hopefully) in quick succession.  They will be:
1) Random stuff from August and September and Finn's 23 month update
2) Our trip to America
3) Finn's 24 month (2.YEARS.OLD.OMG!) update
4) Our new flat (only saved for last because I haven't taken the "after" pictures yet...)

Ready?  On my mark, get set... go!

Thursday, 5 September 2013

The Manx Summer Holiday


Since Cori has her new job, in a Museum where the emphasis is on the school holidays, it landed on me to look after Finn for the two weeks that our nursery was closed over the summer break. Naturally enough, I thought that I would take Finn back to the Isle of Man… Cue picture of the Isle of Man!


Finn and I had been alone to the Isle of Man back at Easter, but that was only for four days, and that was tortuous, with Finn in the worst mood that I’ve ever known him to have. However, I forced myself to believe that he would be fine this time around and that seven days wouldn’t be too much. And, in the end, I was completely right – seven days wasn’t enough – Finn was enjoying every minute of it and it was a shame that we weren't there longer to do more!

Finn really got a lot from the trip and he was really engaged with so much of what we did; it wasn’t just enjoyment, but real engagement and happiness.

The first, and perhaps most obvious, of Finn’s joys was the abundance of cars:


But, more than an multiplication of what he has at home, there were also the sort of car that he was able to sit in!


But topping all of these was the real car that he got to ride in. Finn loved to ride in the car. Loved! We had to drive in it at least once a day, and he didn’t tire of it even once, even after quite long drives around the island (though he did often fall asleep en route). He particularly liked it when granny wasn’t in the car, when I would hear his quite “wow” or “wee!” accompanying our swift attack of the winding Manx roads! (Unfortunately, there is no picture of Finn in a speeding car, but I hope that you can imagine it!)

After the cars came the trams – Finn loves trams. Loves! We’ve not been able to take one before, because they only run during the summer, but I was amazed by how intensely turned onto the experience Finn was – even after half an hour on the tram, he was still quietly staring with his concentrating-frown as we rattled along from Ramsey through Maughold. (Apologies for the poor picture, but it’s the best I got!)

 
I was a little nervous about being in the outside carriage, I have to admit, but Finn was too busy taking it in to fidget even a bit. We got off at Ballaglass Glen, where we went for a very nice walk before eating our packed lunch and returning for the tram home (through which Finn slept).



I didn’t think we had time to complete the transport set, but I was delighted when there was some time in the morning of our last day to get the steam train from Douglas to Ballsalla (where the airport is). I can’t remember ever having been on the train (though I know I have been), so I think that I was almost as excited as Finn when we got to the train station – it is a really giddy-exciting sight, even for someone who doesn’t really care for trains. Though, to be honest, I don’t actually think that I came anywhere near Finn’s excitement upon first seeing the trains – he ran towards them with his arms aloft shouting (I mean shouting!) “Train! Train! Train!” (The giddy confusion of excitement wasn’t lessened by having a digger and a row of buses to pass by on the way to get into the train!)

However, when we got on, Finn wasn’t so excited, as there is little to see from within the carriage, so I was rather glad that we were getting off half way along the route. (I suspect that the older male train enthusiast tourists were also rather glad to be shot of us, as I’d entertained him through the journey by spotting sheep and cows, with the appropriate noises etc.). Granny, of course, was there to meet us, and Finn was able to wave the train off with a “Bye, bye” – although not before being seriously frightened by the real-life “choo-choo”, as heard from the short distance illustrated by this otherwise lovely photograph:


However, the one experience that Finn enjoyed most of all was the Agricultural Show. I had hoped and suspected that it might go down well with Finn, though I also feared that he could have been bored or frustrated by it – I don’t think any of us would ever have expected for him to have enjoyed it as much, as intensely, and for as long as he did! We arrived at around 10am, and we didn’t leave until around 3pm. Finn was, I assure you, in his pram for only the first 30 minutes of that, before he leapt out and ran around leading the way and shouting excitedly for the next 4.5 hours! The reason for this is pretty much given in one picture:


But the Finn-excitements didn’t stop at the tractors – he amazed me by being absolutely enthralled by the animals there for the show. I had to be on guard to stop him from climbing into the sheep pens and I couldn’t stop him from reaching in to stroke everything, whether they were happy about it or not! Most impressive though was his greeting all of the sheep (he especially liked the sheep) – he would crouch down by the pen and stick his head and arms through the bars to wave at them and shout repeatedly “Ello sheep!” The only way to get him to move on was to distract him with the sheep in the next pen, gradually moving him towards the place where we actually wanted to get to! Then there were the cows. Then there were the antique tractors. Then there were the antique cars. Etc.

Worth a special mention from the show was the band that struck up as we went past – a swing jazz quintet composed of old gents who looked as though they were probably around to remember the Good Old swing jazz days very well indeed! Finn was, inevitably, enthralled. Knees bobbing and hands rolling (in a wind-the-bobbin-up fashion) – dancing like a legend in his Viking hat and with either his concentrating frown on or a smile of glee. He really enjoyed it. Really. I, however, enjoyed it less so when he saw me sat down and demanded that I stand up and dance with him (though thankfully only for a moment before he forgot about me and got back to concentrating on the band and boogieing)!

Also worth a special mention was the constant admiration for Finn’s hat from complete strangers that we passed in the Show. I had received such comments about once every time we’d been out on the island (where people are more friendly than London, and probably more inclined towards home-knitted horned hats), but it was almost ridiculous the number of people who told me how great the hat was and followed up by asking where I’d got it from. Obviously Cori should get to knitting up a stall’s worth for next year’s show!

Finn’s enjoyment of “stuff” on the island was, as I’m sure you know by now, intense and off-the-scale at times. But he enjoyed most of all just hanging out with his cousins and granny (and auntie and uncle, of course… but, to be honest, they didn't really get a look in with the boys around!).

 '

(Note from that last picture that another great joy for Finn on the island was the relaxing of rules about sweets, chocolates, pop and treats – grannies are good for that!)

It was fantastic to see Finn really get stuck into whatever it was that the Morris Mob was up to (and to see the boys help Finn to join in so much – thanks, Thomase, Oliver and Jake!). The last time we were over, Finn was still crawling, but now that he is walking he can really get stuck in – such as in throwing water over everyone whilst nudie in the back garden in the beautiful warm weather:


Finn has always been surprisingly good at being comfortable with others and quickly fitting into being one of the gang, but it was especially good to see him do so over a (relatively) extended period with his cousins, really getting to be good mates with everyone. Unfortunately, he wasn’t up to managing Thomase and Oliver’s more difficult names, but he would shriek “Jake! Jake! Jake!” in hope and expectation whenever they were mentioned! (In fact, Finn took an especial shine to Jake, which surprised me – maybe because he understood that he was closer to him in age…?) His chumminess with Jake is shown nicely in this picture taken at the water park within the Mooragh Park, where Finn is repeating on Jake my belly slaps on him of moments earlier:


And another picture of Finn and Jake hanging out (which is also a nice depiction of anarchic fun that is liable to ensue at granny’s!):


Indeed, this amount of boisterous play from the older boys meant that it was generally impossible to keep Finn from joining in – even barriers and perilous drops did not deter him!


In short, Finn enjoyed himself immensely on the Isle of Man. But perhaps equally impressively for me was how he also enjoyed himself doing some of the things that I wanted to do. Like most parents, I am prone to not do things because I think that it will be too painful or not-fun with a toddler, but Finn was in such a good mood, and I was so keen in the good weather, that we were able to do lots of things that I wanted to do. This included going to see the pre-historic stone circle of Cashtal yn Ard in Maughold (the picture is from our lunch break by the old tholtan, just down from the stones (great picture, Oliver!)):


We also got to look around Rushen Abbey, which I’d effectively never seen before (although my enjoyment was rather hampered by Finn inevitably eating all of my biscuits when we had of cup of tea!):


But certainly the most impressive of all was his happily being carried up to Corrin’s Folly overlooking Peel (with a fair amount of huffing and puffing from his father on the way up the steep hill!). The trip took at least an hour (after the 30-minute car journey), through which Finn didn’t complain for even a moment – indeed, I even extended it at the end to go and see a few Geeky-Manx-Anorak tourist sites (such as the home of Sophia Morrison, which I discovered to now be a demolished and vacant lot opposite a petrol station!). Of particular note on the hike was our stop for our packed lunch at the top by the tower - Finn happily sat still chomping his way through cheese and jam sandwiches followed by a banana and a “snack” (which translates as a chocolate bar or some other such treat). There on the top of the hill with the sea on one side and that beautiful green island on the other, I felt perfectly contented and happy, and happy that Finn was there with me – perfect!



It was, in short, a real pleasure, for me and Finn. We’re now just looking forward to the next time, when we hope that Cori will be able to join us!

Sunday, 1 September 2013

Daily Reports - The Best Of (May-August 2013)


Cori has taken Finn off to Ohio, leaving me with quiet, sleep, and a lot of unpacking to finish off! One of my things to do is to write a blog on the Boys-Only trip to the Isle of Man which Finn and I had a few weeks ago, but I thought that I would release a quick post now with the best bits from his nursery Daily Reports.

The 20th of August was the one-year anniversary of Finn being in nursery. In all that time I've been saving his Daily Reports and typing them up onto the computer (despite Cori mocking me for this rather questionable use of my time!). In getting through the stack of backlogged reports last night, some of them are probably worth typing out here, as they are very telling of the sort of toddler Finn is...
    6th May
    Finn took part in an activity of whole-body painting. He was encouraging other children to touch the paints, by saying "Yeah! Yeah! Yeah!", but he was reluctant to touch them himself.
This was typical of Finn at this time, back in May - he did a lot with his "Yeah! Yeah! Yeah", like asking for food, getting us to do something again, or for getting our shoes on and going out the house.
    11th June
    Finn enjoyed playing with the cushions in the cozy corner; he was hiding underneath them with Conrad.
Conrad is Finn's best friend at nursery - it is really surprising, for us and for Conrad's parents, to see how well they got on together. (Conrad is probably the only child who Finn will share with (though that is only some of the time!)).
    12th June
    Finn enjoyed a tasting activity. He dipped a lolly stick into a selection of foods to taste and discovered that he really liked the taste of Golden Syrup, which he wanted to keep tasting.
This is a good example of Nursery Report language: for Finn's wanting to keep tasting, understand it to mean that he wanted to eat the whole pot of Syrup and that he (probably) put up a fight when they wouldn't let him do so!
    25th June
    Finn joined the toddlers outside doing a role-play holiday activity. He really enjoyed pulling a small suitcase along while walking around outside.
The story that they told us around this was that when they split the youngies and the oldies for their activities, Finn was stood at the window between the rooms crying when he saw what the the older children were doing. Without any other real option, they let Finn join in the older children's activity, packing suitcases and going on holiday (which meant carrying them around). The suitcases were far to big for Finn, hence him "pulling" the thing around, by which they meant "dragging". - We were sorry not to see that!
    5th July
    Finn had a lot of fun playing in the paddling pool with his peers. He had such a good time he was refusing to come out at lunch time. He then went straight back in after his sleep.
... We like Finn!
    22nd August
    Finn had fun outside today with his peers getting wet with the hose, but only his feet.
I probably agree with Finn on that - the hose was probably very cold!

There are no pictures to accompany these updates / quotes, but I don't think that it's fair not to give any pictures in a post. I am sure that all the good ones will come out in the "August" post, so I will instead give you three awful pictures from the month now just gone (in the Isle of Man, in a lounge with far too many unpacked boxes, and in Weird Land!)...