Our travels through Mississippi took us to two places of note. First, we stopped for a couple of days in Vicksburg, MS in order to tour the Civil War battlefield in that town. Then, on our way to Nashville, we stopped for a few days at a very nice state park in the Northeast part of the state, Tishomingo State Park.
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Vicksburg
Our travels through Mississippi took us to two places of note. First, we stopped for a couple of days in Vicksburg, MS in order to tour the Civil War battlefield in that town. Then, on our way to Nashville, we stopped for a few days at a very nice state park in the Northeast part of the state, Tishomingo State Park.
Saturday, April 26, 2008
Update
Resiliency
Traveling with your kid is a very different experience. For those of you who have done it, you know what I am saying. With a child in tow, the experiences are magnified, both good and bad. Over the last couple of days, we have had a couple of bad ones.
Maggie has been playing with her imaginary friends quite a bit lately. Only in this case, her friends aren’t so imaginary. They just aren’t here. While she gets to see a bunch of new things, play in a bunch of new places, and run around outside all the time, the reality is, she doesn’t have her friends. Thus, we have our not so imaginary friends, Henry and Anna. Two great friends of hers from Telluride who we left behind.
Yesterday, Maggie was thrilled to discover a small green bug that was hanging out in her bunk. She even called me over to see it. “What’s he doing?” she asked. “I think he is just hanging out and visiting you,” I said. This was a moment like any of the thousands of small and curious moments you enjoy with your kids when you spend every waking hour with them. Only it wasn’t ordinary for her.
Later in the day, Maggie went back to her bunk to look for her little green friend. Only he wasn’t there. When she went asked where he went, I said innocuously “he probably just went away.” This was not the right thing to say. The next thing you know, she is staring at us, hyperventilating, with crocodile tears pouring down her face. When she finally gasps enough air to speak, she wails: “BUT IT’S NOT OKAY TO LEAVE! IT’S NOT OKAY WHEN PEOPLE LEAVE AND DON’T COME BACK! IT’S NOT OKAY TO LEAVE ANNA AND HENRY! I MISS THEM! I WANT TO GO HOME!”
Next thing I know, it feels like I am standing there, looking at someone holding my heart in front of me after they just removed it from my body with a spoon. You feel like the worst parent in the world. Like you let your child down to pursue this dream of yours.
Then, we calm her down, she calls her best friend on the phone, talks to her in that semi-coherent stream of consciousness talk that 31/2 year olds use. She has a cup of milk, some bedtime stories, and she is fast asleep. Today, she looks at us as we are sitting around the dinner picnic table and says with a 1000 watt smile: “Mom, Dad, as long as we are together, we can go anywhere and live in Francine.”
I read a book once that contained interviews with the Dali Lama. The author described how when the Dali Lama was told some very sad news, he could visually see the pain and sadness wash over the Dali Lama, who then felt it, remembered it, and let it go. This is what I thought of with Maggie. She experienced the emotions of sadness, of loneliness, completely, and then when the time was right, she let them go and moved on. That is resiliency. If you watch closely enough, your child can teach you something about how to live your life every day.
MPR - Volume 2.0
Next, we turn to our one, and so far only, special feature of the Slow Lane: MPR aka Margaret’s Playground Review. Since we last left you, Maggie has enjoyed two playgrounds of note. The first was at the Mill Creek RV Campground and Resort in Canton, TX. Let me tell you folks, what this playground lacked in size, it made up for in quality. As with every blade of grass at this place, the playground was immaculate. And while it was small, it contained the essence of playground; the Holy Trinity of Fun, swings, rocking animals, and curly slides. If you were to ask Maggie what more she needed in a park, somewhere in the midst of her 100 word answer, you would hear the word “nothing.” We enjoyed several sessions at this park rocking, swinging and sliding. It is as simple as that. Pure playground joy. Unsurprisingly, when asked to rate this park on a scale of 1-5 stars, Maggie gave it a hearty 10 stars!
The second park Maggie reviewed was located at Lake Bistineau State Park. This here park was more of a retro, throwback kind of park. The kind of parks we played at as kids, back in the day when your parents could let you ride your bike without a helmet and not get reported to social services. This park contained wooden equipment with metal stairs, slides, and money bars. Oh the humanity! Hot in the summer, stick your tongue to it cold in the winter, actual metal, not that ployvinalethalenewhatever stuff they make play equipment out of these days.
Despite its old-school style, this park delivered, with one exception. One of the ladders leading up to the big slide was missing a rung. This unfortunate situation didn’t allow Maggie to summit the slide area solo, so the park’s rating suffered a bit. On the plus side, it had a good ole fashioned tire swing, which was a very cutoff shorts and stick fishing pole kind of stylish. All in all, Maggie gave this park a solid 7 out of 5 stars.
Check back real soon for more MPR, until then, play safe and wear your sunscreen.
Swamp Thang
All that aside, Lake Bistineau was lovely. It was a quintessential, postcard type Louisiana spot. Huge pine and deciduous trees reaching right up to the water of the lake, which is full of giant Bald Cypress trees with Spanish Moss hanging down from the branches. We just hung out, hiked around a bit, and enjoyed the view. We were planning on renting a canoe to explore the lake a bit, but canoe rentals don’t start until “summer” (after Memorial Day), ignoring the fact that it was about 90 degrees in the shade while we were there. The other highlight comes when there is no light and you can hear the sounds of the night. Hollow tree frogs calling out their sweet song to the ladies so loud it sounds like your high school tuba player warming up in your ear. Crickets, bullfrogs, owls, and other unknown sounds combine intro a cacophony of indigenous audio. It sounded EXACTLY what the bayou should sound like. While I loved the experience, I slept with earplugs. There is no way I was getting to sleep otherwise.
After our visit to Lake Bistineau and our stop to visit my rodmaking friend, we headed to Vicksburg, Mississippi for a tour of the Civil War Battlefield, but we are getting a bit ahead of ourselves. We were going to go to New Orleans, but when you are traveling around the country in your own little world, you don’t notice things. Things like, the weekend we had planned to head down to N’owlins, was the same weekend as a little thing called Jazz Festival and 350,000 other people had beat us down there. Didn’t think it was quite the right time to drag Francine through the French Quarter. Oh well, next time.
Some photos of the Lake, just a taste of the Bayou. I have been experimenting with an old photo technique I used to use a bit, pinhole photography. Pretty cool when combined with digital cameras. High tech and low tech collide and create some pretty interesting results. Enjoy.
Don't Mess With Texas
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Wind
We drove uphill today. All day, or so it seemed. We drove into the wind today. 90+ degrees and winds at 30+. From Santa Fe to Carlsbad, NM. It wasn't that far on the map, but believe me, it was long.
Going West
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
The Salida Times
Monday, April 7, 2008
A Programming Note
Now appearing . . . MPR
Today we are introducing you all to a new "special feature" of the Slow Lane. For obvious reasons, this new feature is entitled Margaret's Playground Review (MPR). MPR will periodically bring you cutting edge playground reviews from across the nation, straight from 40 inch playground force to be reckoned with, Maggie.
For our first report, we feature the playground at Longfellow Elementary in Salida, CO. This is a classic elementary school playground with a compelling mix of old and new equipment intelligently placed across sand, grass, and hard playing surfaces. Special highlights include multiple slides, swings, bouncing animals, and climbing apparatuses.
We started of the day with some classic sliding, followed by running, some rocking animals, and wrapped things up with multiple climbing excursions. This playground is bigger than many elementary facilities and it made for a great play session.
When asked what she would rate the Longfellow playground on a scale of 1-5 stars, Maggie enthusiastically gave it 10 stars. Clearly a great review from Maggie. No doubt the bar has been set high for future playgrounds, we'll see how it all shakes out in future editions of MPR. Thanks for tuning in...