Tag Archives: children

31 Years of Memories–Year 5

Year 5 from 12/28/1986 – 12/28/1987

Cabin Camping
Dale and I were active adults BC (before children) and we were determined that having children would not alter that behavior, that we would not succumb to the couch, or to Daddy-Dockers to Mommy Jeans to elastic waistbands. Seriously. We ran with Meghan in the pre-jogging stroller, the double wheels vibrating like an old ’50 Chevy that exceeded 50 mph, with her gums (pre-teeth) chattering over every bump in the road. We played intermittent tennis games while Meghan toddled around the adjacent tennis court, certain to stop a rally whenever she stepped on our court every minute or so. We hiked, as long as ever, only not as far. In fact, we learned the incontrovertible rule of the age of the child equal to the total miles a family could hike without serious catastrophe. For example, Meghan was 2 ½ and our hikes were about that in miles (total per day) and all was well. Any farther, things deteriorated inversely to the time it took to get there.
We thought we had this parenting thing down, or at least the car camping part. Since children take to camping like a labrador to sticks, like a cat to cat nip, we headed to Dale’s property in Cascade, Montana, 30 miles from the nearest town of 500 people. A remote place, just on the eastern side of the divide, where the National Park Service drops errant bears, where hunters prowl in search of deer and antelope—this is where Dale’s cabin was and where we stayed.
It took four days to get there, four agonizing days of eight excruciating hours of the Cinderella tape played incessantly (at least 130 times going there), with Meghan screaming “play it again” each time the tape ended (18 minutes 45 seconds) and not a wink of sleep from her car seat. Finally, with the last few bumps and turns of the road, just as we pulled to the site of the cabin, Meghan mastered the art of sleeping in the car; the rhythmic bouncing on the unpaved washboard of the county road rocked her to sleep. All we had to do was find other backcountry roads for the return trip, and maybe, we could make it back in time for the start of the school year. It was late June, plenty of time.
The rustic cabin was one room with exposed insulation on the walls and plywood for floors, a wood burning stove for cooking and heating, yet this possessed more comfort than the tent. Dale built a ram pump, so we enjoyed running water and a stream fed solar shower. A hammock strung between two beautiful aspens provided the perfect napping place for our toddler, for any of us. A creek, barely a trickle in summer, at the bottom of our hill provided hours of amusement for Meghan, where she was safely entertained with mud and rocks and bugs and water. Meghan ran between swinging in the hammock to splashing in the water. It was a glorious vacation, primitive, elemental, fun.

31 Years of Memories–Year 4

Year Four from 12/28/1985 to 12/28/1986

Lightning Strikes

I thought I finished my adventures, not quite. A particularly memorable camping trip occurred when Meghan was 1 ½ years. She was already a seasoned camper, since we sought Yosemite every school break. On this late August afternoon, we pitched our tent in Tuolumne Meadows . She toddled around the campsite, sticks and rocks in both hands, calling after the deer, “Dog, dog, dog.” She was one with surrounding dirt and mud.
As often happens in the Sierra, thunder showers roll in quickly and behave violently. Clouds billowed from all directions, as we watched the sky go from near cloudless to a scattering of pretty, puffy white clouds to large, menacing, ominous ones to completely dark in less than 30 minutes. We grabbed Meghan and darted into the tent just as the rain started. The thunder got louder, near deafening, and closer to the flashes. At first I counted, “one, one thousand, two, one thousand…” The next flash, I could not count even “one.” In one terrific flash and simultaneous thunder, my fingers tingled, the welts on my blue jeans got hot—even burning my skin, my hair stood on end. I thought certain this was our end—electrocution. I whimpered, holding Meghan tight. Dale sat across from me experiencing the tingling fingers, hot welts, hair on end, but he had been in thunderstorms before like this. I continued to hold Meghan in my arms, trying to nurse her throughout (whatever was I thinking), while we sat on insulate pads and sleeping bags. As quickly as the thunderstorm arrived, it passed, and I felt foolish for freaking out. We climbed out to find how horrifically close we were to the strikes.
Lightning had hit all around us. Lightning hit our campsite. It struck our picnic table, bounced along the rivets to the anchor chain, kicking up dirt where it finally grounded. Lightning struck the camper van next to us, blowing off all four of its hub caps. Lightning smacked the clothes line strung between trees, not more than 10 feet away from us, traveled down the synthetic rope, and burned holes in anything that contacted the metal on the clothes pins. Lightning blew off the “bear box” on the tree across from us. And from the same downpour, in which our tent sat smack in the middle of a brand new creek, most likely a great conduit of the lightning strikes, the insulate pads saved us. That same lightning storm killed several people who took shelter in the restrooms. We were the fortunate.
This same year, Nana Eva joined our family when I returned to work. She needed us as much as we needed her. She was the most popular nanny in the Mommy and Me class and many Moms wanted her, but we were the lucky ones. It was a year with mixed blessings and trauma, as a car accident totaled the Honda Accord, but “earned us” money enough for a new Volvo. I miscarried a tough twin pregnancy in June, a few days before my grandparents 50th wedding anniversary. I counted my blessings. We were alive. We had Meghan.

The Duck Grows Up

One morning, Allie and Samantha went into the backyard to release Quackers, our family duck, from his nightly penning. Quackers was as hefty and as unwieldy as a squirming two-year child, despite the fact that he was only two months old. He wiggled in Allie’s arms, futilely flapped his nearly full-grown wings, and gave his best efforts at flight, landing him bill-down between the cage and the stack of hay. With his bottom upside down and my girls screaming for help, I ran outside, but it was too late, the damage was done. When we pulled up Quackers, he sustained bird brain damage as a small trickle of blood ran from his bill. Since I was not going to pay staggering emergency vet bills, I consoled my children, and then set Quackers free to stagger about the yard, hopeful that he would not die in front of us. He did not, but he staggered for several days and his behavior became increasingly odd. He no longer walked straight up as a duck should, instead his head turned sideways as though he sustained a sprained neck. Since I was not going to pay for a duck neck brace, we watched and waited. He ate and drank normally, and when in his swimming pool (our kids’ old wading pool), he straightened up and swam straight—in circles. Perhaps this was a muscular trauma; perhaps time would heal the sustained whiplash, until I realized his side-ways waddle was because he could only see out of one eye. Quackers waddled, leading with his “good” or “seeing” eye, which made for a twisted duck. My original diagnosis was undoubtedly correct and I called our neighbor-pediatrician to come up for a brief consult. Dr. B laughed, “This has to be one of the weirdest house-calls in my practice. You know, I usually don’t see ducks.” However, Dr. B. concurred with my diagnosis. A week later,  bird brain healed, Quackers regained his lost eyesight, and began turning his head from side to side as though testing out his recovered vision.

At three months, Quackers was developing into a well-fed Pekin, ready for a banquet. He flourished from the exercise and endless supply of food. The exercise came from chasing perceived predators and from herding his “flock” of small children who ran about the yard. At this point, because of Quackers’s animalistic dominance, we became convinced he was a male, although neither my husband nor I was going to “sex” Quackers to be certain. Nevertheless, it was very evident that Quackers was the Alpha-male of the backyard—a near ½ acre with a pool in the middle. Children planned their strategies to reach the swing set at the far corner of the yard. I grabbed a mop to keep Quackers at bay, while the children made a “run for it.” The duck would be stuck, only shortly, as he watched the children run in two opposite directions around the pool. As bird brains go, Quackers had a decision to make—which direction and which innocent victim to attack. Not that he would eat any of them, but countless children from the neighborhood sustained tiny red welts from his bill-bites, as he latched on the thinnest piece of skin and held tight. I was the nurse for many. Once safely atop the play structure, the children were stranded by  Quackers, who circled the area, quacked loudly, and waited to strike unaware children who swung too low, or dropped from the rope, or slid down the slide, or jumped off the monkey bars. He was there. Waiting. Quacking. Again, I rescued children, with mop in hand, and defended against possible attack-duck.

Quackers generally challenged anyone who entered our yard, be it dog, cat, raccoon, possum, skunk, turkey, kid, or adult, as though they were intruders into his personal territory.  He reigned over his domain of three little girls and their posse, their mother and her friends. My husband, a man of 6 feet 4 inches and 230 pounds of pure, muscular strength, was one of the few creatures that Quackers respected.  Perhaps this was because Dale showed Quackers his size 14 boot, gently nudging the duck, always safely in the chest, just like a kicker sends flying a football 50 yards into the field goal. After a few “flying” lessons, the duck learned. He tentatively approached Dale, quacking softly and bowing to him, as though heaping praises, “Oh, Master, may I please come near?” If Dale moved an inch or two, Quackers quickly retreated, proving the established “pecking order” of our household—Dale, then the duck, then me, then all the little girls, and finally, all their friends and visitors.

On hot, summer days when our kids swam in the pool, Quackers patrolled back and forth along the pool fence, blocked from entry, and, of course, quacking loudly without abandon. Such a cruel fate Quackers was given—wings to swim but not to fly, and our pool, small by human standards, was far superior and bigger than his five-foot plastic version. Pekin ducks, such as Quackers, are not bred for flight, so the children were secure, albeit briefly, from brutal duck-attacks, as he could not muster the strength to span the six-foot fence.  These hefty birds, bred for more for meat than anything, are perfect for a Thanksgiving or Christmas meal, and that was not that far away.