Monday, December 29, 2014

18 Months

I've slacked off on the monthly photo shoot/update posts since Cal turned one, but oh-so much has changed since June, I felt like an update was in order.  (Even if it's being posted when she's nearly 19 months!)  It's truly amazing to watch a little person learn and grow and develop a personality all her own.  What a miracle!  And what a blessing to be a part of it all.


Probably the biggest change we've seen in recent months is that Cal has finally (Finally!) put crawling-as-a-primary-means-of-locomotion behind her.  She took her first official steps while we were in Utah over Thanksgiving (when she was about 17 and a half months old).  It took her a few days of drills with Gregg after we got home, but once she caught on, she never looked back.  The best part (for her to do and for us to watch) is that she can now carry so many things around the house because her hands are no longer occupied by crawling.  What a revelation!  She'll carry stuffed animals and snowmen, hair clippies (hers and mine), books, balls, blankets - anything and everything and all of it at once.


She has become quite a vocal and articulate little girl.  I stopped counting in late October when she surpassed 100+ words in her vocabulary and she's only added to and improved upon that base since then.  Some of my favorite words and phrases from her recently include: 
  • nanatch (sandwich)
  • fwing (swing)
  • cickies (cookies)
  • barf (scarf)
  • piany (piano)
  • walking/dancing (said while walking/dancing)
  • moosh (moose)
  • yights (lights)
  • man (snowman)
  • abbo-sauce (applesauce)

She's now starting to put a few words together into two word sentences like "all done", "yights on", "arm in", "go walk", "turn it", etc.

She can tell you the sound of practically any farm animal (and a handful of birds and jungle creatures, too).  She can also identify at least 6 different shapes (square, triangle, circle, star, x, and heart) (thanks to her little shape bucket pictured above).  We're working on colors, but they seem to be harder to grasp (everything is "red" right now).


She's able to say the name of pretty much everyone in the family (including aunts, uncles, and cousins) . . . except for Melia (for some reason that one is the hardest, go figure).  And not only can she repeat them after us, but she can also recognize them in photos and procure the correct name to go with the face on the page.


She's also got a pretty awesome memory, especially for her beloved stories.  We've made it a game to stop reading (or reciting) a story (or poem) at strategic points where she will promptly fill in the missing word.  Sometimes she'll sit near her ever growing pile of books and flip through the pages "reading" aloud to herself.  My favorite as of late:

Cal's Version of The Three Little Kittens
mittens
What?!
meow, meow
pie


Cal is such a happy baby, despite still being kind of a stinker as far as sleeping goes.  She has her good nights/naps, but I think we can probably count on our fingers the number of days she's truly "slept through the night" without ever waking up.  Our most recent hurdle has been her sudden hatred/fear/refusal of her crib.  I don't know where that came from.  But for now we've stopped fighting it - for all of our sakes (especially Gregg's, I'd say, since the fight was making Cal and me especially cranky).  So now she sleeps on a twin mattress on the floor.  And for anywhere from an hour to most of the night, one of us is usually laying/trying to sleep next to her.  It's not ideal or what I would prefer, but I'm learning (slowly, very slowly sometimes) that I'm not always in charge.  I've got to pick my battles.  Callie's sleeping habits seem to be very much like her Auntie Mugs's were when she was a baby, so says my mom (and my memory).  And Megan is a great sleeper now at age 18.  So I guess there's hope.  :)


Her loves: books, balls, blocks (she's awesome at knocking down stacks, but she's surprisingly great at making them, too - even taller than her!), trucks, baby story time at the library ("ah-wee!"), singing songs (she always says "yay" at the end of any song - even the hymns at church), walks, swinging, phones (even though she knows they're off limits), counting, baths (she really loves to play with the water as it's filling up the tub or the whirlpool that forms when the water is draining), kids (especially her cousins), opening cupboards, snacks: oranges, graham cracker with peanut butter "sandwiches", raisins/craisins, and cookies are her favorites lately, blankies, skyping (even though the people on the other end may question this sometimes since she never holds still very long while we're talking), snowmen, getting the mail, dogs, keys, unshelving the dvds, church (though she doesn't love sitting still, she adores walking around the aisles and up the ramp to the stand, as well as playing with the chalkboard magnets in the primary room and seeing all the kids and people), "sauce" (this can be any condiment we have on the table - salad dressing, sour cream, salsa, etc - she's got to have some on her plate, too!), soccer, the vacuum ("bacoom").


Her hates: sleeping in her crib, tape/stickers/bandaids/sticky things, tape measures, being strapped in her carseat for too long (anything longer than an hour is too long usually), milk, having her nose wiped (but what kid does, really?), being poked and checked at the doctor's office.


She's learning how to be a really good helper.  She will clean up her toys, books and tupperware cupboard when we ask (usually).  She loves to take things to the table and put them on (like her plate and fork, napkins, hot pads and serving spoons).  She especially loves to help unload the dishwasher (even when I'm trying to load it) and we're just starting to work the other way on putting things in.  Her newest helping trick has been with me while I'm baking/cooking.  She always wants to bring the chair over from the table so she can stand next to me and dump in the flour or spices.  I remember doing the same thing with my mom, so this is an especially fun development for me.  Our favorite "chore" of all, though?  She now carries her own dirty diapers to the garbage for us when we're done changing her.  (I learned that one from the Farrers with Cohen and I stored it away because I thought they were brilliant!)


Finally, her latest stats:
height: 32 inches (up 2 inches since September)
weight: 19.3 lbs (8th percentile) (up 2 lbs since September)
head circumference: they never told me, but the nurse did measure her because Cal screamed like she was getting her head cut off while the tape measure was out
clothes size: anywhere from 6 months (the long sleeve onesie above) to 24 months depending on the brand/style/item
shoe size: 6-12 months (her robeez and moccs) or 3 (her boots, which are too big) (she has pretty tiny little feet)
number of teeth: 12 (6 downstairs and 6 more upstairs on the upper floor)
cuteness level: a million and a half out of 10



Watch Callie grow:  12 months11 months | 10 months | 9 months | 8 months | 
7 months | 6 months | 5 months | 4 months | 3 months | 2 months | birth

Saturday, December 27, 2014

10 Books

A few months ago everyone on Facebook land seemed to be posting lists of their "10 Books That Have Stayed With Me".  Gregg and I even joined the party, creating lists of our own (if you haven't seen them on social media outlets, I'll post them again below).  But we never made one for Callie, book-lover that she is.  I decided she needed a list of her own, if for no other reason than to be a guide for any other babies less than 18 months old (or older, too, there really is no age limit here!) who are looking for something to read.  (I know I've discovered many gems on the lists of my friends and family, so maybe you baby readers out there will find your new favorite book!)

So without further ado, here it is (not really in any particular order), Cal's 10 Books list:
1. Trucks Go by Steve Light
This is the first of Light's books that we found at the library in our board book section. He's got others (Trains Go, Planes Go, Diggers Go) that we love to read aloud, but Trucks Go is by far the favorite - and the one that has definitely stayed with Callie.  After all, it's where she learned that the firetruck goes Wee-ooo wee-ooo wee-ooo!

2. Go, Dog. Go! by P.D. Eastman
One of the first non-board books we ever made it all the way through with tiny baby Callie.  She's a lover of dogs, so this one was a no-brainer.  Our favorite page?  "The dogs go around and around and around." [Long pause from Dad, the reader, 'til Cal and Mom say together, from wherever Mom happens to be in the house] "Go around again!"

3. The Tooth Book by Theo. LeSieg
I admit this was not my favorite book when I first read it.  But it has grown on me.  Must have something to do with the way Cal excitedly shouts "TEETH!" at just the right moment.  She also says the cutest "So . . . " right on cue, ready to warn you about what not to do with your teeth.

4. Good Night, Little Bear by Richard Scarry
This one was a Valentine's Day gift from Grandma and Grandpa Elwood.  It's best when read as Good Night, Little Callie, replacing every instance of "Little Bear" with "Callie Bear" or "Kimberly Bear" or whatever the name of the little you're reading it to happens to be (and of course the corresponding hes and hims with shes and hers).  That's how my mom read it to me, after all.

5. Goodnight Moon by Margaret Wise Brown
Not a book that I had grown up with, though it is considered a classic, we got this one in board book form as a gift from my friend Christine when Callie was born.  She said it was her baby's favorite and little did I know that it would soon become one of Cal's most requested, as well.  She loves to point out all the things in the room (clocks and balloon and fire especially) and is an excellent hush-er, when it comes time for the little old lady to whisper "hush".

6. Dr. Seuss's ABC
I know many a parent who has this one memorized, us included.  It comes in handy, actually, when it's time for Cal to take a nap in the car, but neither of us is in the back seat to read her a story and she's not settling down.  Just start reciting, "Big A little a What begins with A?" and before you know it, she's calm and sleeping like a . . . well, a baby.

7. The Blanchard Family ABC Book by Heather Wihongi
You won't find this one at the library or any bookstore, but let me tell you, what a wonderful gift this has been for our family!  Gregg's sister Heather wrote the text and compiled all the pictures of our family and gave a copy to everyone for Christmas in 2012.  Even though Callie isn't in this edition of the book, she loves to look through it and point out the names of all her aunts, uncles, cousins and grandparents (and mom and dad).  With us living so far from family, it's been an amazing way for her to figure out who is who and feel like she knows them.  It's a treasure!

8. Moo, Baa, La La La by Sandra Boynton
As with Dr. Seuss's ABC book, we've also whipped this one out of our heads in times when a rhyme or a song or a story is most needed.  This was one of the first books that Callie started filling in the blanks when we paused our reading.  It's a fun and clever way to learn a few animal sounds, too.

9. 101 First Words by Jane Horne
Callie got this one from Grandma and Grandpa Blanchard for her first Christmas.  It has been read and loved and studied for hours!  Reading it with Cal has been an evolution - first we started by pointing out the pictures and saying the words, which grew into asking her where a particular thing was and having her point it out, and eventually pointing at something and asking her what it was.  Now she'll point at nearly everything and say its name.  It seems the tables have turned and she's "reading" to us now!

10. Jesse Bear, What Will You Wear? by Nancy White Carlstrom
I had never heard of Jesse Bear before I stumbled across this book at the library one day. I'm so glad I did because it's simply delightful!  The pictures are charming and the rhyming story is catchy.  Callie will ask for this one over and over and over.  There are many others in the series (we also really love Where is Christmas, Jesse Bear?) but I think, as with Trucks Go, the first one we discovered will always hold a special place in our hearts.  (Bonus - you can get this one in a board book version, too.  But the only downside is you lose the clever play on words when Jesse Bear is getting ready for a bath and his mother asks, "Jesse Bare, what will you wear?  What will you wear at night?" Don't know why that didn't make into the board book, but I love it.) 

Honorable Mention: My Pet Polar Bear by Mark Iacolina, Ten Apples Up on Top! by Theo. LeSieg, Row, Row, Row Your Boat by Jane Cabrera
Obviously ten books is just too few to choose from, even for a baby (and her mother and father).  These three are also often read, sometimes over and over in a row.  (Though we don't own the Row, Row one, we have checked it (and many others by Jane Cabrera which are also fun, but this one is the best) out from the library.  It's especially fun to sing that one.)


And, in case you missed them before, here is Gregg's 10 Books list:
  1. Hatchet by Gary Paulsen
  2. Brian's Winter by Gary Paulsen 
  3. Brian's Return by Gary Paulsen
  4. Build and Fly Your Own Plane by Robert Lowe
  5. How to Win Friends & Influence People by Dale Carnegie
  6. It's Not About the Bike by Lance Armstrong
  7. The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin
  8. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle
  9. It's Easy Edna, It's Downhill All the Way by Edna Strand Dercum
  10. Amusing Ourselves to Death by Neil Postman

And Kim's 10 Books list:
  1. All Creatures Great and Small by James Herriot
  2. The Little House Series by Laura Ingalls Wilder
  3. Mormon Scientist by Henry J. Eyring
  4. The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom
  5. Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand
  6. Call the Midwife: A Memoir of Birth, Joy, and Hard Times by Jennifer Worth
  7. A Long Way From Chicago and A Year Down Yonder by Richard Peck
  8. The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
  9. To Draw Closer To God by Henry B. Eyring
  10. The Great Brain Series by John D. Fitzgerald
  11. (and a bonus because I can't help myself) Go, Dog. Go! by P.D. Eastman

Friday, December 26, 2014

Mawee Cahmas

That's how it sounds when Cal says Merry Christmas.  And she finally mastered it on Christmas Day.  Perfect timing, Callikins!  And what a pretty perfect Cahmas it was for our little fam.

Christmas morning - before.

Figuring out this whole stocking thing.
These new snack cups took a lot of
attention - we had to probe her to
find the rest of the treats inside her sock.

Trying on a new bib and holding her very own
Cal-size orange.

Stocking stuffers for Cal: mandarin orange,
bibs, snack cups, sippy cup, bath book, craisins,
toothbrush and paste, hair elastics and clippies,
tights, and goldfish crackers.
Santa really pulled through for her!

Now onto the big stuff!

What could it be?

Her very own camp chair!

Matching teal and purple owl theme of the chair and jammies
totally unintentional, but quite cute.

Time for another present!

No dolls this year for my little girl -
dump trucks all around!

Not only did she get this big dumper from
Mom and Dad, but she got a set of three
smaller trucks from G&G Elwood and a
big picture book about trucks from G&G
Blanchard.  She loves her trucks!

Loadin' it up with Dad.

Off she goes!

Vroom vroom!

Cal got a great set of colorful plates, bowls,
and cups in her stocking from G&G B.
She loved spreading them out and stacking
them up - over and over and over.

She also loved this fuzzy duck throw/pillow/stuffed animal
combo from the Blanchard grandparents.


So snuggly!

During our Skype call with the Loganites, Cal sat for a solid
15 minutes in this big bowl on Gregg's stomach.  (This is
noteworthy because she rarely sits still for any length of time!)

The aftermath - left side of the living room.

The aftermath - right side of the living room.

A little quiet time playing with her fruit from Uncle Nate,
Auntie Shelly and cousin Baby Evy.

Finally letting us try on her new coat.
(And notice the new hair elastic ponytail?
That lasted maybe a half hour and is now
nowhere to be seen - good thing there were
500 in the package!)

We enjoyed our delicious sweet rolls for breakfast (I can't decide which flavor I like better: the cinnamon/raisin/walnut or the orange - both amazing!) about halfway through our unwrapping.  Callie loved opening presents, but after a while she wanted to play with the things that she had already opened rather than open anything else.  And she told us so.  Us: "Cal, here's another present.  Want to open it?  Come open it and see what's inside!"  Cal: "No."   Ha.  But she did get a lot of great things, so I can't blame her.  We all were pretty spoiled, thanks to our amazing family!

We planned on going out in the snow for a little snowshoe walk, but Gregg wasn't feeling 100% so we ended up staying inside and we never changed out of our pjs all day.  Not a bad way to spend Christmas, I say.

Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night!


There's Only One More Sleep 'Til Christmas

Christmas Eve at our Blanchard home looked a little like this this year:

Gregg's official days off from work were Christmas and the day after, but he was able to sneak away early to join the Utah Blanchards in our annual Christmas Eve Skype session.

Gregg's early morning view over the bridge on his drive to work.
It was a nippy -5 degrees F that morning.

What our skype session looked like on the Utah side.

Kage and Dray chatting with us on the computer - we're sure
thankful for technology!

The rest of the day was filled with general house tidying, finishing our last piece of the advent nativity (such a fun gift that we got from the Farrers to enjoy all month - and for years to come!), a quick run to the post office to pick up the last gift I'd been waiting for which arrived just in time,  some food prep (had to get the Christmas morning sweet rolls made!), a little drive up to the top of Lake Creek to see all the snow and our favorite views, and a swinging session at the park in the frigid temps (which didn't seem to bother Cal one bit).

Cal took a little (or a lot) of creative license in assembling
the nativity this year.`

Cal is really getting the hang of this "helping mom in the kitchen"
thing.  I have to say, it's pretty fun.

Beautiful Lake Creek and New York Mountain.

Now there's a happy snow bunny.

What you may not be able to tell from the
photos is the fact that there is about a foot of new
snow under the swing and the temps outside
were hovering near 16 degrees at the time.



We can't get over how chubby she looks in
this barbaloot suit!

That evening we ate a fun dinner of cranberry cream cheese dip, potato chips and french onion dip, shrimp, and bacon wrapped chicken bites while watching Mickey and then the Muppets enact their versions of A Christmas Carol.  Cal opened her Christmas Eve jammies from G&G B during our Skype call earlier in the day, so she had something extra snuggly to wear to bed that night.

We're ready for Christmas here!

Come on, Christmas - we can't wait!