Father Daughter Bowling

As the leader of my girl scout troop, I decided that I wanted to have a father-daughter activity this year. We do a few family activities throughout the year, and we have a mother-daughter cabin trip every summer and I thought it was about time that we should invite the dads to attend an activity with their daughters. I found some cute father-daughter bowling patches and so we decided to take them bowling. Here are some pictures of my girls with their dad:

IMG_2528

IMG_2539

Apparently Dinah wasn’t with Kyle when I took these pictures. You can see just part of her legs and her feet in the second one…

Here’s a shot of Kyle when it was his turn:

IMG_2541

We had about half of my girl scout dads show up with their girls today. I’m kind of sad that more of them weren’t there. But it was our first time ever doing something like this and I hope we will get a better turnout next year. 🙂

Adam’s first Fathers and Sons campout

The boys have been looking forward to each year’s Fathers and Sons camp out, even though I typically don’t care for roughing it in the great outdoors.  With the craziness of Rebecca’s camping trip, I figured we simply wouldn’t go, but she notified me that the little girls would have someone to watch them, so I prepared for the trip.  Adam didn’t really know what was going on, but was thrilled to be in the small car with just his brothers.

This year, we went to Spanish Fork Canyon, which has been much nicer than the closer Willow Park campgrounds in Saratoga Springs.  We had a neighbouring campground to last year’s, just up on top of the hill, surrounded by trees, but also providing flat grassy areas for tents, and a pavilion with benches.  At the head of the pavilion was a large brick fireplace.

We weren’t first there, but when we arrived there was enough of a selection of tent sites that we could easily pick where to set up.  I chose a place just north of the pavilion, close to the trees, to not be distracted at night by the lights and chatter once the kids started coming to bed.  This was our first year using a giant tent we purchased at Costco, claiming to fit twelve people.  It was quite impressive, with two rooms divided by a zipped wall, plus one of the rooms could have been opened into a mesh lined patio.

KWP_20140718_001

WP_20140718_002

WP_20140718_008

The older boys played around in it a bit, then wandered off to seek out activities to do.  I basically spent the time following Adam to keep him out of trouble.

As the evening progressed, and more people showed up, our tent became a hit with the boys who wanted to come in and hang out.  I didn’t mind, as long as they didn’t track dirt into it, and kept it zipped.  More people set up in the pavilion, to eat and play.  The fireplace was lit and some people started on their Dutch Oven desserts.  A common theme at these campouts, is for some of the guys to bring their Magic The Gathering cards, and this time was no different.  The pavilion had lights, at least, so the fireplace was mainly for entertainment use.  The boys started to notice they could run off into the bushes and bring back weeds that they could throw into the fireplace, and they also found a mouse in the area, which they scared around the fireplace until it ran off.

Once it got dark, we started to wrap up the evening.  I like how our ward has mainly young families, so most of the people who came had little kids, and wanted to go to bed early.  Adam was starting to get cranky and noticeably tired, so I carried him to our tent and put him down for the night.  I also started closing up the tent windows, and my ears picked up a faint scritching sound.  At first, I thought that mouse from earlier, was trying to get inside the tent, but then I saw its shadow on the inside, crawling up the wall! And, with Adam sleeping and it being dark, I had limited options.  I ended up using the flashlight feature on my mobile phone, chasing it around and using a shoe to try and knock it out, before my adventure woke Adam.  Fortunately, he stayed asleep through the chaos.  Unfortunately, it didn’t stop running until I had knocked it out with the shoe, so I grabbed a pair of shoes to pick it up, and tossed it outside the tent.

Ethan and Jeremy were in the pavilion, presumably watching some of the older guys play Magic and similar.  I ended up falling alseep with Adam, waking later to find Ethan and Jeremy had wandered to bed on their own.

In the morning, we had typical Fathers and Sons breakfast, consisting of meat products, sausage and bacon, plus pancakes, all cooked on dutch oven griddles.  Everyone ate their full and we were done with the event, as the campground needed to be cleared by 12:15.  Everyone started packing up their tents, with ours being one of the last, and we left to return home and take a shower.

Kyle’s Birthday

Kyle had a birthday today! But before we could celebrate his birthday as a family, we had to go to pack meeting. Pack meeting tonight was an obstacle course set up around the church for the kids to race through. When that was over, they announced that they had something special planned for Kyle for his birthday. I actually heard one of the leaders talking about it, and was told that I might want to take Kyle’s phone from him so it wouldn’t get damaged. Kyle was, of course, concerned when I asked him to give me his phone. He knew I had mine and that I can’t use his because I don’t know his password, but he gave it to me anyway. Then they let all the boys throw water balloons at him!

IMG_1581

Kyle tried to get some of the kids back by opening up the spray bottle and throwing water back, but I think he was fighting a losing battle. At least he was a good sport about it. 😉

IMG_1583

After pack meeting we got to go home for cake and presents. Kyle requested a watermelon cake. The kids have been asking for this a lot too. I’ve made banana cake, carrot cake, strawberry cake, strawberry lemonade cake, chocolate cake, pumpkin cake, apricot delight cake, pina colada cake….I guess to them there is nothing I can’t do. I kept telling the kids that you can’t make a watermelon cake. Watermelon is too watery, and the flavor isn’t strong enough to be present after you add all the flour and sugar and other stuff. Finally I googled it, and found a watermelon cake, that was a new concept for me. I had been thinking CAKE! Flour, sugar, butter, eggs….that kind of cake. The cakes I found when searching for watermelon cake, was just a hunk of watermelon served just like cake. So that is what Kyle said he wanted, and that is what I made for him. 🙂
IMG_1595

IMG_1597

As for presents, I had one to give him. Actually I feel kind of lame about it, but he doesn’t really need anything, and doesn’t want a whole lot right now. We have a lot of stuff, and I didn’t want to just buy him more STUFF, so I went practical. I gave him a package of new socks. I’ve been throwing away his socks as I find them all holey in the laundry, and he has nearly run out of socks. For awhile he just thought I wasn’t doing enough laundry to keep on top of getting enough socks through, but it just boiled down to me throwing away worn socks and he was just running out of them. 😉

Troubles with Technology

So if you are a person that is concerned with security on your electronic devices, I do NOT recommend the Kindle for you.

Kyle got me a Kindle for Mother’s day a few years ago because I had complained about missing my Palm Zire. My Palm kept me on track with all of the household tasks, and since it’s death I have struggled with being on top of everything and remembering when it’s time to do things. He thought that maybe I could use the Kindle to keep me on track instead. For a long time I used the Kindle without putting any kind of password on it. I downloaded some calendar apps, and some task manager apps, and some free games and free books. As soon as the kids saw the games they started taking the Kindle and hiding with it to play them. This became troublesome. They even bought a couple of things through my Amazon account, which caught me by surprise when I saw the email order confirmation. After this episode Kyle helped me make sure that I had one click purchasing and in app purchasing turned off, so that any purchase made from the Kindle would require me to log in to my Amazon account.  None of the kids would admit to having the Kindle, and they wouldn’t return it when I noticed it missing and asked for it, so eventually Kyle put a password on it for me. This seemed to deter them for a little while, but then they started trying to guess the password, to get into it anyway. Well here is where the real problems began. On other devices, such as the iPad, or the Nook, if you enter the wrong password five or six times, it locks the device and tells you to try again after 5-10 minutes or so. If you KEEP putting in the wrong password, it locks it for even longer. The Kindle doesn’t do that. Entering the wrong password five or six times you will be given the option to reset the Kindle to factory default settings. In the hands of kids who don’t know how to read, or that just don’t know what that message means, this is not a good option. In short, my children wiped out my Kindle multiple times. I was able to recover my books, and apps, because they were stored in a cloud on my Amazon account, but all information stored IN the apps, was lost forever. Every event in the calendar, every task, I had a good years worth of information in a medical tracker app….all of it GONE. Kyle called Amazon customer service to complain about this feature and find out if there was any other way to get my information back, but there isn’t. So Kyle and I did some further testing. I got all my apps and books back on, and I added a few things to the task list, then we used the cable to back up the Kindle to my computer. Then we wiped the Kindle again, re-downloaded the file from my computer and checked the task list. Nothing had transferred, so it’s pointless to try to back up the device like that. So we ended up just taking the password off. The kids went back to taking it to play games, but at least they couldn’t buy stuff, or so we thought. Somehow, even with one click purchasing and in-app purchasing turned off, Tyra was able to purchase four videos for the Kindle! This is the last straw. Kyle called Amazon and complained about it and they ended up refunding  my card and removing those videos from the Kindle, and we have decided to remove the apps and games from the device, turn off the wifi, and make it an electronic library for home school uses. As for a device for me, we are going to give the Google Nexus a try.