Archive for August, 2011

20 months old


31 Aug

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Toby reading the Field Guide of Australian Birds

I am over a week late for Toby’s update! Where does the time go? Spring is on our doorstep and we have been back in Melbourne for nearly a year, yet there are friends I haven’t caught up with yet. Anyway, onto Toby’s update.

I guess one of the things that stands out from the last month is that Toby’s vocabulary continues to grow quickly, and he is making a lot more sentences now rather than just saying one word. Yes, the sentences have words missing from them, but they are sentences non-the-less. The other thing is that the toileting really seems to have clicked for Toby. He has been doing poos in the potty all year and takes himself, but getting to the potty for a wee has been hit and miss. In the last couple of weeks Toby has started taking himself to the potty for wees much more regularly, and when he has undies on (he does a lot of bare bottom time around home) he tries to get them down and sometimes he can now. Also, he has been dry at night for a few weeks now whereas prior he would have a few dry nights followed by a wet one. He wakes in the morning, has some milk and then asks for the potty since he can’t really walk well in his sleeping bag. I am considering getting a waterproof mattress protector for his mattress and giving up on night nappies completely, which would be good because they don’t fit him very well (they were made for Nathan who had much chunkier legs) and tend to chafe his thighs if he wriggles too much at night.

Counting is a big thing for Toby at the moment. He counts objects up to 4 and then loses track of where he was up to, and he will negotiate for two of something instead of just one. When I say negotiate, it is more of a demand…Toby, would you like a cherry tomato? And he says: Two! He still adores books and points to the words in a book and says ‘words’.

Toby loves walking on brick edging, brick fences, beams, rails, rows of stones….anything he can practice balancing and walking on. He holds my hand as he walks if he is elevated at all.

That’s about it for now.

Inside Body


30 Aug

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Several weeks ago Nathan asked me what a rib cage is. This prompted me to look online for a skeleton I could print out for him. I told him how the ribs protect his heart and lungs. Next thing I know he is harassing me every day to type ‘inside body’ into Google because he wanted to know more, like what intestines look like.

Whenever we are in the city we frequent a little book shop, and Nathan is a favorite of Dora who works there. I told her I was looking for a book about the human body that would suit Nathan, and so she checked with their other shop to see if they had one she thought would be good. Last Friday we went to the shop to have a look at the book as she had it in, and came home with Look Inside Your Body which has little pieces of interesting information and lift-the-flaps all over the place….flaps under flaps under flaps in some places! Now Nathan asks us to read his “inside body” book all the time.

I think it is aimed at an older child, maybe more to the early primary school aged kids, but Nathan adores it and is getting a lot out of it. It is now also compulsory reading for vet Angus and any animal in our collection that wants to become a vet. In the photo above, Nathan is explaining the digestive system to baby polar bear who wants to become a vet when he grows up.

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Pruning or massacring?


29 Aug

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A few weeks ago I had a visit from a local gardener who prunes trees and takes the cuttings for use by a florist. I’m not sure exactly how it all works, but I have had visits from someone like him before, years ago when I used to live here before Sydney. They usually give you a token amount of money for allowing them to take the branches. As far as I’m concerned, I’m just happy for someone other than myself to prune the camelia trees, since they are so large.

So, the guy visited a few weeks ago, but when he got a closer look at the trees he said they weren’t in good condition, with hail and other damage, and he didn’t end up wanting to prune them since he wouldn’t be able to use the cuttings. He recommended cutting about 3 feet off the top and 2 feet off the sides of the trees.

I decided to take his advice and give them a big prune. In the end I only did one tree last week, and Andrew did the other three on the weekend. We had a deadline of yesterday if we wanted the bits we chopped off to be collected in the council hard rubbish collection that we have happening this week. We got it all done, though we really didn’t have a lot of idea how to prune camellia trees. To me it looks good….the trees are thinned out, our front lawn now gets more light (it was rather dark and damp before), and I have faith that the bare patches will be filled in in time. I hope we haven’t done any lasting damage to the 50-year-old trees, but I do believe that camellia trees like being cut back. Unfortunately we did also cut down an old birds nest that was being used by a cute ring-tail possum. Hopefully he will find another home that isn’t our roof.

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Fat and skinny


22 Aug

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Both Nathan and Toby had appointments at the Early Childhood Centre, or whatever they call it here in Victoria….Maternal Health Centre or something. Anyway, Toby was there for his 18 month check, and Nathan for his 3.5 year check.

I was surprised that Nathan had an eye test done. He was given a sheet of paper with some shapes and letters on it, and the nurse put glasses on him with one eye blocked out. She asked him to look at a card she was holding, and then point to the shape/letter on his sheet. After a couple of letters, Andrew just said to the nurse that it would be easier if she just asked him what letter she had rather than pointing to it on his sheet. It made things a lot faster. The nurse told Nathan he was very clever to know his letters, and he said yes, he is very clever. Hehe.

At all these appointments the kids are weighed and measured, and I know that for 2 years or more Nathan has been on the 50th percentile (spot on average) for height, and he has been on the 90th percentile for weight. He has always looked solid, but I have never thought of him as fat. Today was the first time that anyone has calculated a BMI for him, and his was in the red part of the scale…ie too fat.

We were essentially told that we should cut down on snacks. Now I know that neither Andrew or I are great role models in the weight stakes, but I have been so conscious of this over the years that I have been really strict with what the kids eat….to the point that I think that other family members think I am over the top strict. I totally believe that the kids do not need sweet foods, and I hate it when we are out and about and people offer the kids lollies. I feel like such a meanie when I say that they can’t have them, so sometimes I relent and allow it, but this is not often. We have tried to discourage things like Easter eggs, and most have disappeared (easy when they don’t really crave these treats and are young enough to forget about them). On occasions when we might get an ice-cream, we all share a single ice-cream. Same goes for biscuits…the kids never expect an entire biscuit to themselves, we share them. I figured this was a nice way for them to have a taste without getting overdosed on things they shouldn’t eat. If we have dessert after dinner, usually it is after the kids are asleep, otherwise they are allowed a tiny sliver, but again dessert is rare in our house. In general we don’t give them fizzy drinks (never!), or prepackaged snacks, or fruit juice, or lollies or fried foods. So what do we eat? We eat lots of fruits and vegetables, and probably the killer is that the kids adore carbohydrates…pasta, bread, potato, cous cous, etc.. So is this the problem? Or is it that I put a small drizzle of honey onto their porridge in the mornings to make bland oats seem a bit nicer?

Basically, I truely believe that though we may stray occasionally, the kids have a very healthy and balanced diet (the parents need more discipline but that is another story) and eat moderate amounts os food. I never force them to finish a meal, as I believe they know best when they are full. Most of their outside meal snacks are fruit or the stealing of veggies that I am cutting up for dinner. We verbalised some of this to the nurse and she said that if it is all true then he should be a better weight, and we still need to look at what he eats and get low fat milk, cheese and yoghurt, none of which he eats much of. She suggested we might like to have an appointment with a nutricianalist.

I know that childhood obesity is a big issue in Australia, but I am so sad that all my efforts to have my kids eat a healthy diet with loads of exercise have still resulted in being told I have a fat child and I should be concerned (though the nurse admitted he looks well proportioned). Before today I had a healthy concern about their weight, but now I feel like a failure as a parent, that I could not keep Nathan from being classified as fat and being told we need to do something about it or he will pay for it in the school ground. Once again, visiting the maternity and childhood nurse has resulted in me being upset and stressed. I swore off these places years ago….I sort of think I should not have bothered going back. The only reason I did was because I wanted Nathan weighed and measured. Sheesh.

And then, of course, Toby is weighed and he is on the light end of the scale.

Bicycles


14 Aug

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A couple of months ago we decided to get Nathan a bike with pedals, since we thought he was ready to move on from his balance bike. We went to the bike shop and were undecided about choosing between a little bike that he probably wouldn’t fit for much longer, maybe 6 months or so before he would be at the top of the height range for it, or a bigger bike where he was right at the bottom of the size range. They both had training wheels on them, and in the shop (with the help of the training wheels) it looked like he would get the hang of either bike pretty quickly. We decided to go with the bigger bike because Nathan would get many years of use out of it.

After we got the bike home, it was clear pretty quickly that if Nathan had a smaller bike then we would be able to dispense with the training wheels. After all, the idea using the balance bike for the last 18 months was that he wouldn’t need training wheels at all. However, because the new bike is so big for him, he didn’t have the strength or length in his legs to hold the bike up when stationary, so he relied on the training wheels to keep the bike upright when getting moving and stopping. Another problem with the training wheels is that they are wider than him and the bike, and so Nathan could mis-judge gutters or obstacles which would cause problems when his training wheels ran over them.

Yesterday we went back to the bike shop to look at the smaller bikes, and at first the lady serving in the shop couldn’t really understand why we wanted a smaller bike. She said Nathan fit on the bike we had, and that we could expect him to use training wheels for quite a while. In the end we bought the smaller bike, they took the training wheels off for us, and we took it home. It really is what we should have done in the first place. About ten minutes of trying to ride the bike on our drive-way and on the footpath, and Nathan had the hang of the bike and was zipping around on it pretty confidently…..without training wheels. Yay! And we already have the next bike for when Nathan grows out of his new one. 🙂

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3.5 years old


14 Aug

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Nathan is now 3.5 years old. People talk about the 2’s being a tough time, but we seemed to mostly breeze through. Yes, we had difficulties, but nothing that would make me dub the year as the Terrible Twos. That year Nathan had to get used to being a big brother, so I didn’t really expect it to be easy. The Threes I have been finding harder, though until now it was mostly to do with sibling rivalry/fighting. I have definitely found the last few weeks the hardest of being a parent so far, and it has been solely due to Nathan’s behavior. He has become really unhelpful, and deliberately destructive and/or messy. He has also had a number of tantrums/meltdowns when he doesn’t get his way, with many if them being in public (which is never pleasant). The thing is, I know that when he is being destructive, for example, that I can fix the situation by spending some one-on-one time with him, but either I am in the middle of doing something I don’t want to stop, like cooking dinner, or Toby gets upset and tries to dominate my attention. I also think that sometimes I expect too much from him, because he is the big boy compared to Toby, and I forget that he is only three years old which is still pretty little really.

Still, I don’t want to linger on the difficult, because there are some wonderful things that Nathan is doing, and he is also fun to be around. He is interested in everything, wants to know how everything works, wants to do (almost) everything on his own. His reading is slowly coming along, and he still amazes me at times when he reads a sign or a word in a book I didn’t realize he knew. He is getting a lot better at throwing, but still struggles with catching, and his balance is great and can now walk on planks (for example) without falling off. He still has his own language, but his real words are getting more and more understandable by those who don’t know him, with more sounds being pronounceable, though c, q and r sounds are still pretty difficult for him. He adores his little brother and they share their own little world and can play together really well, but he is also way too rough with Toby and often play ends in tears.

One of the things that has changed with Nathan over the last 6 months, and it is a really big thing for us, is that he doesn’t often breastfeed to sleep any more. Most nights Andrew reads him to sleep on the couch while I am getting Toby to sleep in the bedroom, and then we transfer Nathan to his bed. Funnily enough, he doesn’t go to sleep when Andrew reads to him in his bed, but he does if I try on the bed (though that doesn’t happen very often). Being able to share the job of helping Nathan to sleep has been wonderful for me. The books we read to Nathan are ones with lots of words and not many pictures like Roald Dahl books (though many of them have to be censored – many of his stories have lots of violence and/or guns in them, neither of which are really appropriate for his age…to my way of thinking).

Nathan has started watching a small amount of TV in the last 3 months. He has seen a few episodes of Playschool now, mostly when Andrew doesn’t make it home from work before I take Toby to bed. To stop him harassing me while I try to get Toby to sleep, watching Playschool as been a useful distraction. He has seen half a dozen or so episodes, so it is not a regular event. He has also watched a few documentaries which he loves.

Update: yes, it is now several weeks on from when I wrote the above, and I truly jinxed us with Nathan’s sleep. He has become so very difficult to get to sleep lately that we are having fights at night over sleep which I hate. I am hoping he learns to relax and go to sleep soon….surely this is just another phase…..surely…..

Nathan’s new jeans


09 Aug

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I finished these jeans for Nathan a few days ago. I wasn’t sure if the bling in the back would look silly on a little boy, but it is ok. The pattern is from Ottobre 1/2010, and I made size 104 even though he is 98 cm tall. Some other pants that I made for him in size 98 are getting a bit small, so decided to go the next size up (and hopefully, being denim, they would last a couple of seasons…unlike the cord pants I made him that last just a few months before holes appeared in the knees). Anyway, the combination of the pants being a size too large and the denim being slightly stretchy means that the pants are enormous on him. I tried adding a bit of elastic in the back of the waist, but it wasn’t enough. We ended up getting him a belt from Cotton On Kids to keep his pants up.

The pants took me at least a couple of weeks worth of stolen moments and nights. I got soooo frustrated with my machine, skipping stitches when top stitching over seams that were so very bulky. I have since found out that there is a simple solution to help with this problem. I got the studs put on near the pockets by a little shop in Brunswick, but they charged me $5 for them both which isn’t a lot of money really, considering they had to stop what they were doing and set up a different machine, but in Sydney it would have only cost me $2 so it felt like a bit of a rip off. 😀

I also decided to get a metal zip so the pants would be more…jeansy, if that is a word, but I couldn’t find a 9 cm one required by the pattern, so I ended up with a 12 cm zip. I normally cut down the dress zips for the boys pants, and it did occur to me that I would not be able to cut the metal zip but decided to try it anyway. Well, I won’t do that again! I had to hand stitch some of the top stitching at the bottom of the fly because I couldn’t sew through the zip. I had other issues with the pants too (I have a new rule not to cut anything after 10 pm), but I think that they turned out ok in the end. Nathan likes them, and that’s all that matters really.

Me, well I’m just happy they are finished. Finally.

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About Dragons


08 Aug

Nathan (singing to the tune of row, row, row your boat…last two lines): if you see a dragon with wings on the road, don’t forget to scream.

Mummy: don’t all dragons have wings?

Nathan: Komodo dragons don’t have wings, do they Mummy?

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