Sunday, February 8, 2009

We have a stomach bug!

Everyone, except Jeff. We woke up and were rushing to get to Church this morning, when we discovered that Jack had thrown up. I kept us all home, just in case. Then I succombed, and just now Lucy. Lucy, I think, is the most upset by it. The slightest trauma is the greatest drama! Although, I would vie for a close second because being pregnant with the flu, two other flu victims to clean up after, and a week's worth of meeting to get ready for, isn't my favorite thing.

I have to say that these issues with bodily fluids are my absolute least favorite part of being a mom. And I hate being in quarantine because it is lonely. And I already hate laundry, so extra laundry is just so much fun.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Ultrasound Pictures


Yesterday we had the big ultrasound for baby #3. Can you guess what it is?




Jeff is so excited that we are having another boy. I realized with Jack that I am bad at guessing the sex of the baby, so I tried very hard to not form an opinion this time.. Therefore, I wasn't surprised or not surprised because I wasn't voting one way or the other. I am very excited. Jeff was convinced that it was another girl because he wanted another boy, so he was very surprised. Pretty much everyone, except Danna's Jeff, had thought that it was a girl, so most were very surprised.





This one definitely has its own personality. He doesn't like to be pushed or prodded, and didn't cooperate very well with the ultrasound. We are having another ultrasound in two weeks because he wouldn't let us see his whole spine, or take very good profile pictures. But everything else looks very good and healthy. He is growing at the right pace, and my due date is still the same.





Lucy had decided a long time ago that it was a girl, and has been calling the baby, Clara, ever since. She knows that it is a boy now, but she won't say anything else on the subject.


Jack didn't really understand the whole thing, but he seems fine with the idea that he is having another brother.


As for names, we are not decided on a boy name. We had decided before getting pregnant on a girl name, but we are still tossing around ideas for this boy. Right now, we like Henry, calling him Hank when he gets older. I like Baby Henry. And as he gets to be a toddler, if he's anything like Jack, Hank the Tank will be a very appropriate nickname. Neither of the kids can properly say Hank or Henry, and are currently calling the baby "Henwy" or "Honk". I don't know if we will stick with Henry; we still have a few months. But right now, we kinda like it.

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Bliss






This month, between periods of intenst busy-ness, were several moments where I got to truly soak up being home with my kids.


Lucy found a witch's hat I had bought for my self for Halloween, and then decided was to ridiculous to actually wear, and wore it around the house with her white and pink tutu. She cackled "Aaa Aaaah Aaaahh" and told me that she was quite scary but a nice witch. Only in Lucy's world can you be both. She also told her daddy a long story about how she lives in a diamond castle, although to be honest we only understood one word in three that she was saying. And one day we made farm animals out of pompoms, but Lucy wasn't happy until we had drawn them a barn, and mud and food to eat.

Jack is picking up words so fast now. (We are trying to unlearn a few now too) He says so many things, and then he laughs--he is still very difficult to understand. Although it is a lot better than completely his own language like before with a glug-glug sound made deep in his throat for water. And I have more opportunities to appreciate how sweet he is. When we are out and about they are both so chaotic. Jack tends to love to take off sprinting in any direction, or to do things just to drive Lucy crazy (he will sit in the car with his toe touching her seat just to annoy her). In nursery, he is the biggest and pretty much the busiest. But at home, he brings me cups of water in case I am thirsty. Or makes a game out of holding my cheeks and kissing me as long as he can, or until one of us starts to laugh. He tells his fire truck, "It's okay fire ruck, I'll help you. I'll take care of you. It's okay" It's just a different story when we are home, and it's one that I didn't get to see enough when I was away working.


The kids are both giving pretty hilarious answers when it comes to the baby in my tummy. When I ask Jack about the baby in my tummy, he answers, "Oh no Mommy! The baby's sad." I guess he thinks that being in my tummy cannot be a good thing. He now will kiss the baby in my tummy better, but he is still worried about the whole arrangement. Lucy would like to know where the baby in her tummy is. And she is quick to notice when my stomach gets bigger. Best, I think, was after she went to the doctor's with me last time. She came home and told Mema that the baby has a heart, and then that Lucy's heart was located almost exactly where they found the baby's heartbeat on my stomach. It took some convincing to get her to believe that her heart was actually up in her chest. Lucy was so unaware, and she so pointedly ignored Jack at first, that it is really fun to watch them explore this idea of a sibling. She never did that last time.

The Wedding Show


I know that I still owe anyone who actually ever checks this blog pictures from Christmas, but if I wait until I manage to do that, I will be so far behind on what is currently happening that I will never catch up.





















Last week Jeff and I did the big wedding show at the Sundome. Really I did it, and Jeff came along because I begged and threatened otherwise (and maybe I threw a few cupcakes, but I have horrible aim so that doesn't really count). You would have thought that I was dragging him to an arts and crafts fair in an elementary school gym! But when we got there, and he saw all the big tents and huge displays, he changed his tune. Next year, he says, we will have to do an ice sculpture, and have food samples (don't ask what happened to this year's food samples). I have to say that I don't quite care what he plans for next year, as long as it is we and not me. He really was helpful, even chatty at the show. It went very well, and I can't blame him for not understanding. It's not like he'd ever been or conceived of going to a wedding show before.



So after much research (thoroughly fantastic that searching wedding websites and magazines all day counts as work) I decided on a black, white and pink display with a patterned table linen. Black is supposed to replace brown this year, and patterns are completely haute--at least from what I "studied". I really tried to keep it simple because I didn't want to go over the top this year; the purpose was to test the waters. But we (I) received really positive feedback. The strawberries were a particular hit, as were the table linens, and the cupcakes. I couldn't understand the fuss over the cupcakes--I literally slapped frosting on them and rolled them in sugar while discussing with Jeff the plans for the show the next morning. But so many comments over how sparkley they were (hello, it's sanding sugar!). I had forgotten that I had picked up some beaded flowers, and I found them at the bottom of one of the bags that I brought with us, so I stuck those on top. I do think that it looked great, especially compared to the competition. It was an excellent opportunity to network and introduce people both to our catering and our restaurant.



I spend most of my day talking, debating whether or not Lucy should sit on the potty or shouting, "No Hitting! No Throwing!" I believe that my voice is quite in shape, but I honestly went hoarse by the end of the event, and I was sore that night and the next day. I was so quiet the next day that the kids were honestly giving me strange looks.



Overall I think the best part about this wedding show, is that there is only one a year. We're still tired from it.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

And We're Back!

So it has been awhile since I've updated the blog. Not because nothing has happened, but quite the opposite. So much has changed and happened.

A quick run over what you've missed:

October--

Wood Floors! We tore up our horrible ugly brown carpet, and discovered relatively good floors underneath. They do need to be refinished at some point, but for now we put rugs over the most needy parts. The rest looks pretty good. It was a huge project, a little more than we anticipated, but well worth the results.


Before

After



Halloween! Lucy dressed up as a fairy princess, combining all things wonderful, and Jack was a gnome. He actually loved the hat, and I had to finally hide it so I wouldn't have to fight with him about wearing it to church!





November--

Greg and Kim got married! Jack and Lucy got sick at the wedding, and I feel like I'm still playing catch up around the house. It was the sickest they had ever been with 104 temps, croupy coughs that turned into bronchitis. We were in the ER and the pediatrician's office. I didn't sleep for over three nights straight, but they are alive and fine.




December--


Home Again!! I am no longer working in the lab, although I am going to help with some marketing. But I am mostly home with the kids again, for the first time in a very long time. I feel like I've hardly had a chance to appreciate the change with all the busy-ness of Christmas and the caterings, but I'm looking forward to being with them more and having the opportunity watch them grow up.


Caterings!! We did three caterings, and they all went very well. Jeff and I feel like we are really getting a system and a rhythm to these things down. They were a lot of work, and I'm not looking forward to next December when we will have (hopefully) many, many more than three caterings.

Preschool Program--Lucy did so well in her program! It was adorable. We had front row seats because the teachers were worried that she would misbehave, but she did wonderfully. She got so excited when people clapped for her, jumping up and down. It really was so cute.




Christmas and New Years!! I will post a slideshow later this week with December's pictures, but for now, I'll just say that it was so fun. They love their new toys--a dollhouse, big art easel, new trains and cars, barbies and doll clothes, kitchen food and puzzles. They have spent the break playing and being quite entertained all by themselves, which I think might be my favorite part!




If you haven't heard yet...

We are pregnant with our third baby and due June 25th!! We are all really excited, and everything is going very smoothly. I was a little nauseous in the beginning (I thought that the cleaner for the floors when we pulled up the carpet was making me sick, umm not quite) but nothing too terrible. I've been tired, but that is easier to deal with now that I'm home. We will find out what it is in about a month, so I will let you know when I know. The due date makes for interesting timing, since the restaurant will (hopefully) open to the public June 1st. When we started trying the restaurant was supposed to open this last fall, then January, then February and then in moved to June but we were already pregnant. So I guess June will just bring a lot of good things for our family.


Little Hands and Feet

Profile of the Baby

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Fair Day

Friday, October 3, 2008

Homerun the First Time at Bat



We had our first catering as Sage Catering last Saturday. And, we hit a total homerun!


It was a benefit dinner by a nonprofit, First Down Dreams Foundation, to raise money for Children's and Children's Village. We served approximately 150-160 people. They decided to serve the meal buffet style in order to save on cost, so we set up cool buffets with tons of food. The students from YV-Tech helped us run the gig, and they did a fantastic job. It really went off well.


The food was excellent. For starters, we had cucumber cups filled with shrimp cerviche, puff pastry with brie and chutney, fresh clams casino, and parmesan crisps with blue cheese and chutney. For salads we served spinach salad with goat cheese, candied pecans, dried cherries, apples and a bacon balsalmic vinaigrette, bleu cheese potato salad (my mom's recipe) and Pasta caprese salad with fresh mozzarella, basil, tomatoes and a vinaigrette. Sides included fresh corn salsa and herbed rice pilaf. The entrees were chicken stuffed with bacon, mozzarella, mushrooms and herbs served with a cherry honey mustard (it was a to-die-for sauce, my idea thank you) braised beef shortribs with a cherry barbeque sauce and cedar plank salmon with a lemon dill creme fraiche. Desserts: chocolate decadence, apple tarte tatin and fresh peach creme brulee served in the peaches. It was a beautiful evening, and the food was truly excellent. Although, Jeff at McDonald's on his way home because he forgot to eat some of the leftovers.


The next morning, I awoke to find my feet literally covered in blisters that I didn't remember getting during the event, and a bruise on my shin that I don't remember. My body was sore for days; I haven't done any events like this for a long time. I'm outta shape! And there is no work, like restaurant work. I don't think Jeff hardly moved at all for the whole day afterwards. I had to go to Portland for the day, so I didn't really get a break. Although, the eight hours in the car were much more appreciated than they would have been if I hadn't spent the few days before working 18 hours in order to be ready for the catering.


Eventually we should have pictures of the event. I didn't have time to snap very many myself and Denise Andersen, who took our other pictures, was there. So I hope she got some good ones. I do have some pictures of Jeff and the kids. They worked so hard and did so well. I think it's a real testament to Jeff's abilities as a cook and a teacher that he could take kids, after three weeks of instruction, and pull off and event like this one.


We are, understandably I think, very proud of ourselves after this last weekend. It really was a homerun on our first time up to the plate by ourselves.