Butterflies

It's been an extra special spring at the Straka house this year - we raised butterflies!  Our cup o' caterpillars arrived "special delivery" one day after school.  They were teeny-tiny little things, and Sam had his ladybug magnifying glass glued to his eye at all times, watching them wiggle up, down and around the cup.  We sat on the porch that day and read a book about a little boy who raises Painted Lady butterflies while we watched our "cater-pickles" (as Evie calls them) crawl around and munch, munch, munch on the food at the bottom of their cup.

Sam journaled a picture of the caterpillars every couple of days.  We were surprised how fast they grew!  Eight days after they first arrived, we woke up to our caterpillars in their "J-formation" at the top of the cup.  This was a pretty exciting discovery because we knew it meant they were on their way to forming their chrysalides.  What we didn't know was how fast it would happen!  That morning before school they were "Js", and by the time we got home from school, they were almost all wrapped up.  Amazing! 

About a week later, our chrysalides were snug and cozy when I checked on them before taking Sam to school, and then few hours later I walked by the cage again and BOOM we had three butterflies!  Three of our four butterfly babies had emerged from their chrysalides and were drying their wet, crumpled wings.   I quickly cleaned Sam's room up all nice, gathered some flowers, fruit and made some sugar water, and then placed the butterfly cage on his art table.  I picked him up from school and didn't say anything, but I did ask him to go in his room when we got home.  Needless to say, he was very surprised!

One night Sam came running in to Brian and I, clearly upset, telling us we needed to come to the cage.  He said "I think there's something wrong with this butterfly's leg", and sure enough, there was a butterfly leg on the bottom of the cage, unattached to a butterfly (see image above).  Sam burst into tears and was terrified that the butterfly was in pain or might die.  We assured him she was fine and that she had five other perfect legs and two sets of perfect wings to help her get around.  He monitored her closely, and we were happy to find that she was quite mobile throughout her time with us!  We called her a "she" after Pops named her...<ahem>..."Eileen".

We fed them and observed them for several days, watching the fourth chrysalis on the bottom of the cage, wondering if he was ever going to emerge.  Sam informed me that all his butterflies were boys because he's a boy, completely unaware that all us grownups had been snickering about "Eileen" for a while.  Sam and Brian went out to run some errands on a Saturday afternoon.  While they were gone, our fourth butterfly emerged from his chrysalis.  His wings were pretty crumpled, and part of his chrysalis was stuck to his tongue, so he was having a hard time.  I surprised Sam again when he and Brian got home.  I told him to look in the butterfly cage - you can tell he didn't see anything at first!  Once he saw him, he was so relieved that all our butterflies were out and flying. 

I was really bothered by our new little guy who was struggling with his proboscis.  He wanted to eat but his chrysalis was getting in the way.  I did a little "surgery" with one of my sewing tools, and while I was able to get off the piece that was blocking him from eating, the force split his proboscis in half quite a ways up, so he ended up looking like a snake with a very forked tongue.  His wings never uncrumpled, either, so the poor guy had a rough go at being a butterfly.  I may have named this butterfly myself, but...<ahem>...it wasn't a very nice name and is definitely not blog-appropriate...

The day finally came when it was time to release our babies.  We waited until Brian was home to help us.  We thought Sam might be upset, but he handled it very well.  Gram told Sam to release them somewhere close to the house because they like to hang around the people who raised them and help pollinate their flowers for them (*wink *wink).  So that's just what we did!  Three of our butterflies flew around the yard and the bushes, then up and over the roof.  Our fourth butterfly, the late bloomer, needed some extra help, so we placed him on the flowers in our front pots, and eventually *he flew away and lived a happy butterfly life!

*He did not fly away.  He hopped down from the pot and took cover under the bushes were he stayed for TWO days.  He even survived a hailstorm!  Tough little bugger.  We don't actually know what happened to him after that.  Shhh...don't tell Sam!

Sam was a GREAT big brother to his butterflies. We all learned a lot and we hope to do it again and again!

Go Tigers!

Sam's playing coach-pitch baseball this season and it's going great so far.  Today was his first game, and although he didn't make a hit today, he's got great form, as you can see in the picture below.  He's been getting a lot of hits in practice and learning how to be a better player in the field.  He loves baseball and it looks like it's going to be a great season.  Go Tigers!

Climbing, Swinging, Sliding

It was a dark, dreary afternoon, but it was warm and there was no snow or ice (yay!), so out to the playground we went.  We stayed a long time, too, because it had been a while since we'd been to our park.  It felt like spring was just around the corner!

Morning at the Library

The kids and I went to the library for Sam's first day of Spring Break.  We found some new things to do there this time.  There was a writing station set up so kids could pen a letter to Curious George.  Sam asked if he could write one and later he said that was his favorite part of our visit.  Both kids tried the computers for the first time.  They used a painting program and the touch screens made it extra fun.  We left with a load of books, as usual, and ended our outing with grocery shopping and lunch at Market Street.  Everybody was pretty good and got along together fairly well - success!

Letters

Sam had been playing with his plastic hundreds board and its number pieces when he noticed some patterns he wanted to show me.  That led to a discussion about numbers and place value and question after question, until we eventually arrived at the origin of numbers.   We talked about how they are symbols to represent how much of something there is and stayed on that for a while.  Then he asked about where letters came from.  I pulled the children's dictionary off his bookshelf that I used when I was little, and showed him how each letter of the alphabet has its own section, and at the top of each letter's first page were drawings of ancient versions of that letter with a short summary of its history.   He thought that was very cool.  I suggested he grab the notebook I got him recently (he likes to take notes on topics that interest him, just like the character Jack in The Magic Tree House series we've been reading) and copy some of the previous versions of the letters.  We went through letter by letter, read each summary and looked at how the shape of the letter changed over time.  The third and fourth images below show his reaction to learning that the letters U, V, W, and Y all started out as the same letter.  A little dramatic yes, but not surprising - he's always loved letters and language.  The best part of our history lesson? - when we were all finished, Sam was flipping the pages backwards as he started to close the dictionary and it landed on the M page to reveal the word "magpie"!  What a perfect ending!

Split Second

Sam and Evie played so nicely in her room the other day.  It was warm and sunshiny in there and they both wanted to draw.  They were so quiet, too, focused on their artwork.

But don't be fooled - they don't always play this nicely.  

In fact, it often changes in a split second, with little to no warning and maybe even for no particular reason.

Oh well.  It was nice while it lasted!

Library Girl

Evie and I went to the library on Monday with some photography friends.  Most of the pictures I took of her there were outtakes (i.e. blurry messes), but I still caught a few of her in action.  She's such a busy little thing at the library, it's hard to keep her still long enough to snap a photo.  She enjoys the books and likes to watch the other kids play with the alphabet puppets, but her favorite thing by far is the play kitchen.  She's so busy fixing everyone tea and oatmeal and soup.  She shared nicely with the other little kids there, too, which was a pleasant surprise for Mommy!

We brought home a couple of books for her; a full-size version of the "strawberry book" (which she has memorized!), a couple of books with photographs of baby faces, a book about colors and a book about numbers.  She likes to read the number book and point to the objects in a very random way and say "one, two, free, four, five, six...". She isn't counting one-to-one, but she gets from one to ten and always sounds very proud of herself for doing so.

The tricky part of taking her to the library is finding a way to get her out of there without her screaming and throwing a tantrum.  Food usually works.  This particular day we needed get groceries so I asked her if she was ready to go get a slice of pizza from Market Street and then get food for dinner.  It worked!  

Until next time, library!

Guybrarian Sam

Friday was community helper day for the Kindergartener's at Sam's school.  He chose to go as a librarian, or as our friend and favorite librarian Ms. Ellis called him, a "guybrarian".  He dressed up in his shirt and tie, grabbed some books from his library basket and borrowed the wayfarers we bought Daddy for his MadMen party last spring.  I added a notecard with some call numbers on it in one pocket and pencils in the other to complete the look.

He also had to create a poster that showed what a librarian does, so we came up with some questions and did a phone interview with Ms. Ellis to help him come up with ideas of what to draw.  He presented his poster in class and his teacher sent me a picture.  We think he makes one cooool guybrarian!

Click, Take 2

This is one of the images from the series I took of Sam for our photography exercise.  I like this one a lot, even though we can't see his face.  I took another one of Sam playing with this Brownie at a playdate almost four years ago.   He's not using it right either time, but gosh, it's cute!

{2015}

{2011}

Take Five (or so) with Sam

Sam and I participated in a creativity exercise for our photography playgroup yesterday.  The original plan was to shoot for 90 seconds to capture some of the expressions and little details that make Sam...Sam!  When the time was up, we would put the camera down and be done before he got bored or annoyed.

We ended up shooting for at least ten minutes.  Whoops!  It took us both a while to get into a groove.  I realized fairly quickly that the best way to get natural expressions from him was to get him talking.  He's such an animated storyteller, as many of us already know.

We talked first about Andrew and Kelly getting married next fall (and "the kiss"!) then Evie and school and some other stuff.  He asked me where wind comes from, how it's "made", and shared his theory that tornadoes blow through Denton and push the air to Providence.  I had to put the camera down at that point and clear up a few things; can't shoot and talk science at the same time!

I look at each of these thirty-two images and think, "That's such a Sam face!" and "Oh, that's such a Sam face!", and yet they're all so different.  I don't know how many people, strangers included, pointed out how expressive Sam was as a newborn, but it was a lot.  Looks like not much has changed.   Now we've added marker-ink on the hands, shaggy hair that needs a cut, chapped lips and an amazing vocabulary to those expressions.

And we love each and every one of these Sams.

Naptime

I've posted a lot of sleeping photos of Evie lately...I'm afraid that's the only way to capture our little blonde blur right now.  She's always on the move!

I'm guessing Brian won't be thrilled I posted pictures of him sleeping, but I just couldn't resist.  Evie was so comfy snuggled next to her daddy.  Brian on the other hand, not so cozy.  It's hard to be 6'3" and be comfortable on a small couch with a two-year-old couch-hog 

and

her blankie

and

 her dolly, but he did his best to rest with her for a good long while.  Such a good daddy.

The Spritz Tradition

Christmas doesn't start until the first Spritz is baked!  Having done this for the last several years, Sam is a pro at making our favorite Christmas cookie.  Now Evie's old enough to learn how to help make them.  Sam graduated to coloring the dough this year so Gram and I could teach Evie how to decorate with sprinkles.  She was quite a forceful sprinkler, so Gram had to tape all the holes closed but one!  The only thing she'd sprinkled up to this point was parmesan cheese on her spaghetti, so she kept asking to put "more cheese" on the cookies.  Silly Evie!

Gram's antique cookie press has been on the fritz for several years and finally died this Christmas, so we had to press the design disks into the dough by hand.  But it worked great and the Spritz were as yummy as ever!  Thanks, Gram!