Clark has bought himself a second-hand surfboard at one of the local shops and heads for the beach at 5:30am. He is ecstatic to have a
surfbreak he can see from the patio lounger.
At a more decent
hour we take a stroll through the Eurobodalla Botanic Gardens to check out some
of the local greenery and birdlife. A
beautiful spot to see some old Wooly Butts (a eucalypt tree not a botanic
streaker), superb blue wrens (which truly are), and a lovely picnic spot with an innovative playground where Rusty bangs on various wooden instruments to her
heart's content.
Audrey has begun her
adventure into the world of solid foods.
We started by offering some rice cereal, mum-mum's and fruit purees in
late December. She devoured all the rice
cereal I offered in the first several days, but then she wasn't too interested
in anything much beside the mum-mums.
Given her sister's motto towards food (no fruit, veggie or meat shall ever touch these lips) this was causing me a certain amount
of anxiety. Over the past couple of weeks I
had offered her a variety of different fruit-type purees that I thought she
would love - but for each one she would make a terrible face and get as far
away from the spoon as possible. Still,
she was incredibly interested in everything that we were eating. Time for another approach we thought.
I started by
offering her some mushed-up banana from my finger - she grabbed my finger like
she'd been starving for weeks and shoved it straight into her mouth. Then she leaned forward and opened wide for
more. Only from my finger though - she
refused to eat it from the spoon! Next
we tried mushed up carrot - same response, then green beans - loved them! Today she discovered kiwi fruit (after one
bite of kiwi she tossed the carrot she was holding, grabbed the whole kiwi
right out of my hand - jaguar speed - and shoved it straight into her mouth - I
had to do a finger sweep to get it out!).
So, we have skipped the puree stage altogether and she is quite the
little fruit and veggie lover so far.
| Audrey after a bout with carrots! |
We manage to get the girls down for a nap at the same time and Clark catches some
more waves while I spend some time with my book, and a glass of wine on
the lounger. Love simul-naps!!!
When we first
arrived in Sydney there was a huge mural of Australian underwater life in the
airport with an arrow pointing to what they described as the #1 killer - the Box Jellyfish. The Sydney aquarium also gave this creature
its due with some pictures of extreme burn-like wounds and instructions on issuing CPR
should you be bit. I was keeping my
eye out for these creatures whenever I ventured into the surf. After his surfing session Clark comes
trotting across the road to show me his jellyfish wounds - stung once on each
arm - and it looked very red, swollen and bumpy.
"Did you see
it," I asked?
"No," he
replies. I start trying to remember how
to do CPR in my head (was it 1 breath and 5 compressions or 2 breaths and 3?).
"Well, do you
think it was a Box jellyfish," I ask, somewhat concerned.
"No," he
replies.
"How
come?"
"I'm not
dead," he says with a grin. We find
out later that Box jellyfish only occur
in the warmer tropical waters up north (doesn't that sound odd to a Canadian).
DAY 6 - Thursday January 19
We’ve fallen into a
bit of a routine. Clark goes surfing in
the morning, while I get the kids up and dressed, feed them breakfast and pack
for that day's adventure and then I have eggs, bacon and a hot coffee waiting for
him when he comes in the door. Or... he
surfs while we continue to sleep.
Today we have a lazy morning around the house and then head into town to try to get some internet stuff done (blog posting, banking, e-mail, etc.). The only crux of our Surf Beach place is that there is no internet access. We have to drive to Bateman's Bay (a bigger town about 15 minutes from our place) and find a parking spot where there is a decent connection using the portable dongle that we bought. Then one of us tries to amuse both children somewhere in the vicinity, while the other sits in the car and conducts business - it's a painful and slow process (the dongle is not synonymous with high speeds). Today it was my turn to do the internet while Clark took Rusty shoe shopping.
We always knew that
Rusty had a bit of a shoe fetish. In the
green space at Lane Cove she pointed and sang to one woman's shoes for so long that the woman commented "a girl after my own heart". Putting shoes on is the first thing she wants to do when she wakes up in the morning, and sometimes it's a battle to get her to take them off before she goes to bed. She likes to wear her shoes inside of my shoes (the more shoes the better). For days now she has been eye-balling the flip flops that all the kids are wearing down here and Clark decides that it's time to replace the little
yellow crocs. After trying on and finding the perfect pair of flowery flip-flops he tries to take them off her to pay for them. Apparently she screamed all the way through the entire K-Mart and most of the way down the street. Poor Clark.
DAY 7 - Friday January 20
On the road again. Today we are off to Mallacoota
for 7 days.
| The Gear |
| By popular request - the Swagg'n Wagon |
We take the 350 km
drive from Surf Beach to Mallacoota in basically one fell swoop, and it takes
us about 5 hours of driving time.
Driving in Australia is not the same as driving in Alberta! When planning the stop after Surf Beach we
think 350 km (like Calgary to Edmonton) will be easy.
350 km on the prairies - piece of cake - 350 km on Princes Highway -
slower, curvier, narrower, and much longer.
But the drive is mostly uneventful - no
puking, no screaming, no nothing. Audrey
sleeps for the majority of the trip and is content to jaw on mum-mums the rest
of the time. I hand them to her from my
front seat and her tiny little hand reaches out and grabs each one like a mogwai
that's been fed after midnight.
Rusty is completely
entertained by the portable DVD player that Grandma bought her for
Christmas. What a great gift (thanks
Grandma!!). She watches Huffalump at
least 3 times, everytime it finishes she says "more, more" and then sings, yells and talks along to the characters (thanks Aunty Jana)! We will surely have this movie memorized by the end of our trip.
| In the name of the 100-acre wood, I capture you |
I'm glad to hear that after some initial struggle, Audrey seems to be taking to eating like a pro! Miss R was introduced to the world of mums-mums a couple of days ago and now we find them sticking to her everywhere after she "eats" one. Or licks them and sticks them to herself.
ReplyDeleteAnd will popular request get us some video of Clark surfing?!?!?!?
Thanks for the food advice! W is HUNGRY, but doesn't like rice cereal, yet grabs for everything off my plate. I'm going to give him his own food to shove into his mouth and maybe this mama will get a little sleep. Love reading the adventures. Thanks for the wagon photo.
ReplyDeleteKK