2016 Family Adventure – Part 2: Old Sturbridge Village

November 12, 2016 1:57 pm

The first order of business after our long train ride was a day off.  So we spent a day just hanging around the house letting the girls run around the back yard.

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I’m sure you weren’t, but in case you were wondering, all the pictures on this trip were taken either with a phone or using my new 18-135mm zoom lens that I purchased specifically as a just-take-one traveling lens.  I’m fairly pleased with its performance though it’s not as nice as my 50mm prime.

The next day it was off to Old Sturbridge Village in Massachusetts.  A preserved / restored rural New England village representing life from the 1790s to the 1840s.  On the way there we had to make a pit stop to find some Dramamine for Heather, who was becoming carsick.

When we arrived we first ate lunch at the Oliver Wight Tavern.  Then it was into the past:

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The sawmill is always interesting.  There was a lot of ingenuity in these old water-powered automation systems.  Kind of amazing what it takes to bootstrap a society.2016-10-05_14-07-46

 

Here’s Jess taking a break next to the covered bridge.  The covered bridge doesn’t usually have the interior fencing.  They were setting up for a town-wide production of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow and the fencing in the bridge seemed to be to keep the audience on the edges, presumably so they wouldn’t be trampled by a galloping horse.  Side note: I read The Legend of Sleepy Hollow on the train ride home.  It’s kind of dumb.  I guess it’s a good representation of the “Have you ever heard the story of the….” kind of ghost tale though.2016-10-05_14-31-19

 

I took this picture as Heather and Corinne were chasing chickens around the town green.  The chickens had all hopped off the side of this porch and Corinne was getting ready to follow.2016-10-05_14-50-29

 

Hanging out at the general store eating a snack.2016-10-05_14-58-41

 

The water wheel that operates the gristmill.2016-10-05_15-14-58

 

Squirrel!2016-10-05_15-53-50

 

Corinne was enamored of all the animals, but, unlike the chickens, the sheep didn’t run away.2016-10-05_15-57-41a 2016-10-05_15-58-52

 

After our adventure in the past we made our first Friendly’s stop for dinner and ice-cream (and it’s only like half a mile from the Old Sturbridge Village entrance).  Heather chose the build-your-own kids sundae with mint chocolate-chip ice-cream, strawberries, cookie dough, marshmallow, and rainbow sprinkles.  She thought it was amazing.  I stuck with the Reese’s Pieces Sundae.2016-10-05_18-26-45

Then back home for another day of rest before our adventure-within-an-adventure: Washington, D.C.

2016 Family Adventure – Part 1: The Train

November 5, 2016 2:11 pm

We’re finally getting caught up around the house.  So I can start blogging our big adventure.  Our big family adventure this year was a train trip to the East Coast.

We loaded up on the California Zephyr in Martinez, CA on September 30.  The Martinez station is fairly nice.  It seems to have been recently renovated and the parking is free.

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We booked a private sleeper room and a roomette since 4 people can’t sleep in a single room (you could fit 4 in the “family bedroom,” but then you don’t have a private bathroom/shower).

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Heather was super excited to sleep in the top bunk.  She and I stayed in the roomette while Jess and Corinne stayed in the regular room.

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However, Corinne and Heather completely changed personalities / temperaments while on the train.  We called them “train children.”  They were just…different.  We had a long stop in Denver so we got off the train to walk around a bit.  Which was when we decided maybe Heather was getting motion-sick.  So we bought some Dramamine for her, which helped her significantly, but she was still a “train child.”

Meals generally involved Jess and I attempting to cajole some food into their mouths while they acted loony.  Watching shows on phones was about the only way we could get Corinne to sit still.

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The California Zephyr runs to Chicago at which point we had a long layover before boarding the Lake Shore Limited out to Springfield, MA.  We took the opportunity to walk around Chicago for a bit.

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It was a bit cloudy so we postponed going up in Willis Tower (formerly Sears Tower) until the return trip.  But we did get some authentic Chicago-style pizza at Giordano’s.

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Okay, the perspective makes the pizza look bigger than it really was, but it was still impressive.

After dinner we hung out at the station–in the Metropolitan Lounge and wandering around to stretch our legs.  The newly renovated Metropolitan Lounge is quite nice with plenty of space.  The dedicated “Kids Corner” was very helpful in keeping the girls contained and entertained.  I also took the opportunity to use their new showers which was quite nice.

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Our train out of Chicago didn’t leave until 9:30pm, so the girls were pretty exhausted, but we got them changed in to pajamas before boarding so they could go straight to sleep.

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Then it was on to Springfield.  Mom and Dad picked us up at the station and we were glad to be in New England and off the train.

A big difference between this trip and the one we did in 2011 was the timeliness of the trains.  Amtrak must have worked out a new agreement with the freight companies or something because we were almost always either ahead of schedule or on time.  Maybe I’m mis-remembering, but it also seemed like last time we always waited at every station until the scheduled departure time.  But this time I think if the stop didn’t have a real station (meaning people couldn’t show up and buy a ticket at the last minute) the train would leave as soon as all expected passengers had deboarded/boarded; which really helped with the time performance.

Life with Heather

February 12, 2016 7:44 pm

I have a habit of making up little songs that I sing to Heather.  They’re not impressive in any way, but she likes them (usually).  The most often criticism I get from her is to “make them more rock-starry.”  I don’t really know where she got the concept, but she then is happy if I give the song a more rock-and-roll style.

Because of her regular insistence on my songs being more “rock-starry,” on Saturday I told her I was going to put on a song for her that I thought she’d like.  I told her it was a song I associate with Grandpa (her Grandpa, my Dad) playing on Saturday mornings for some reason.

Dickerson kids should now make a guess about the song, we’ll see if we developed a similar association.

I played “I’m gonna be (500 miles)” by The Proclaimers and she thinks it’s awesome.  We listened to it a few times and she can sing along with some parts.  During the chorus she got her stroller and would strut around in circles pushing it along.

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Now for something completely different.

One of the kids from Heather’s preschool class had a birthday party this week.  It was Monday evening and Corinne was going to need to be going to sleep, so I took Heather to the party.  It was at a party place in town that has a room with big inflatable play structures and a rock-climbing wall and some other rooms for eating and such.  We arrived and I told Heather she should find the birthday girl and say, “Hello” and wish her happy birthday.  But Heather didn’t want to leave my side.

She was a little overwhelmed by the noise of the fans on the inflatable things and by the number of adults milling about.  So we walked around the room getting a feel for the place and she started to relax.  I asked her if she recognized the kids.  She said they were the kids from preschool (with that tone of voice that says, “obviously”).  I asked her if she could tell me their names.  So she started rattling off the names of the kids in her class.  I interrupted her and asked if she could tell me who particular kids were, “Who’s this girl who came over and said ‘hi’?”  But she didn’t know.  We did this a few more times and she didn’t seem to know the names of any of the girls.  Then a couple of boys ran by and she did know their names.

At school they do a game where they say a kid’s name and toss them a ball.  When they do this they’re all wearing name tags.  Heather has no problem with names during this game.

We think she’s reading the name tags (probably not completely, but recognizing enough letters to then pick the right name from her memorized list) during the game.

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I think she must have the same issue that I have with recognizing faces.  I can learn to recognize a face, but it seems to be harder for me than it is for other people.  Especially if I run across someone outside of the usual context–it can be incredibly hard.  Often times I will be able to recognize that I know the person, but have no idea how or why or who they are.  Heather seems to be the same way.  At the party she definitely recognized the kids, but couldn’t connect them with their name, but she knew all their names.

I find it really interesting.  It took a long time for me to realize that I took a lot longer to learn names and faces of people.  I don’t think it was until I was in college that I really figured it out.  Which probably has something to do with growing up in a town where the entire grade was the same ~100 kids from kindergarten through graduation.  I would have learned all the kids eventually and then they didn’t change much.  Whereas in college there was little consistency.

Taking her to that party and watching her in a full-blown social situation where I don’t know anybody and can’t really help things along made me realize how much of my personality she has.  Jess says she sees a lot of her own (Jess’) personality in Heather as well.

We know she does play with other kids in a very normal way, but we also, at times, see her play less with the other kids and more in-the-vicinity-of the other kids a lot too.  And she will, not-uncommonly, just go off by herself to play.

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At the party, when it was time to sit down and eat, she went in and carefully sat at the corner seat furthest from where the other kids were already sitting.  The table then filled in around her.  During the time they were all sitting at the table she only lightly interacted with any of the kids.  I recognized that I was displaying the exact same behavior.  I didn’t really interact with any of the other parents.  I tried to stay to the outside of the room so that Heather would be more likely to interact with the other kids and less likely to just interact with me, but I suppose I wasn’t being a good example of pro-social behavior.  At one point she wanted to tell me knock-knock jokes. I redirected her to tell them to the other kids at the table which she did just fine.  She wasn’t unhappy at all–just not really interested in the other kids.

This makes me feel a little torn.  I fully recognize the benefit of developing the ability to have smooth social interactions, but I also recognize that it probably doesn’t bother her (in the same way that it didn’t bother me at all that I wasn’t interacting with the other parents at the party).

In some ways its feeling like I’ve acquired all this understanding about the world and now have to decide would I have done anything different in my own life growing up that I should now encourage Heather to do.