Posts filed under Nature

All my ideas seems soooo glorious before the follow through

It all began during one of the many trips to the store to buy the weekly allotment of food for the family. I was tasked with a list that was by no means long but was difficult to execute, such as kids cereal (the kind they want or the kind I want them to want), and yogurt (again, so many damn options, and flavours, and delivery methods of yogurt I was doomed to get the wrong kind), I believe I bought the wee little kids cups when I was supposed to get the tubes!

Anyways, before I actually got bogged down in all those damn choices I came across a large box near the end of fruit and veggies. It was full of 4 to 5 foot lengths of brown-ugly-bamboo-looking things. I almost walked right by with a smirk that everyone would have read as "Ha! no one wants to buy a 4 foot piece of creepy bamboo. Am I right?", but my eye caught the label as I passed by.

"Raw Sugar Cane - $1.98"

Well holy crap I stopped in my tracks and pulled the nicest piece of raw sugar cane I had ever seen (it was also the first piece I had ever seen) out of that box and strutted away with an amazing coolness and unconcerned look of "Oh this, I buy raw sugar cane all the time, I feed my 27 year old box turtle* Gorki and then transform the rest of the stalk into a crude flute that I use to express my worldly angst with."

* I really don't think you should ever feed sugar cane to a turtle, it just seems like something someone else would do.

Though I am sure that in those 30 seconds I went from smug smirk to excited as hell and then to cool calm I looked like an idiot that buys something without knowing what he is going to do with it.

..........sigh

See, I have not idea what to do with this thing.The drive home I envisioned the family being excited to see thing new 'food' and rally around plans to consume it in what ever ways we saw fit. Instead all I got was my oldest boy grabbing it shouting "COOL!" and taking a swing at the cupboards with it, resulting in a loud crack. Boy did he look sheepish until we saw that no damage was done to the cupboard door.

Mom asked, "So what do we do with it?". To which I replied "Eat it!"

Well that was the end of that conversation and she wandered off.

I heard her shortly after share a laugh with our daughter when she said "Dad is going to eat a branch for supper."

After a few quick minutes on the Google and I had a whole list of ideas to utilize my length of sugar cane for.

 

  • Soup
  • Chew it
  • Cook with it
  • Kebob skewers
  • Tea sweetener
  • Boil down in to a natural sweetener
  • Coffee stir stick and sweetener (seems like the coolest idea ev-er!)
  • Fruit kabobs

 

...and the list goes on.

I then got out the cutting board, my biggest knife, and a wee paring knife. The directions I found said to cut the cane as close to the knuckles or joints and then peel the hard exterior to get the sweet juicy sugar cane.

Well it was like cutting a piece of 2x2! I had to slam the palm of my hand on the back of the butchers knife over and over and over to get the damn thing to cut. 

So I chopped and swore, and peeled and chopped, and worked so damn hard to turn this stick into nice pieces of soft sugar cane. 

The pictures online made it look so much easier!So with my tiny pile of yummy sugar cane I approached the family for a taste. The one site said to chew the sugar cane and suck all the sweet juice out and then spit the pulp out afterwards. So I thought the kids would be excited to chew some natural sugar.

......sigh

I only convinced the middle guy to give it a try. And after he spit out the pulp he said "This is the best thing I have ever had before in my whole life Dad!". So I offered him as many as he wanted because it would be just him and I, he said "No thanks." and walked away. 

I ended up trying a few different recipes with the sugar cane and not a one of them really worked out. Oh well, at least I have a two foot piece of sugar cane in the pantry and a deep tissue bruise on my palm to remind me of what it could have been. I can still recollect a faint image of the family sitting around, tlaking and laughing while chewing on the fresh raw sugar cane and drinking some home made iced tea lightly sweetened by nature.

I don't think I will ever learn my lesson, because  on Monday I bought a giant can of Gulab Jamun. I plan on cracking it open tonight, when Mom is at her university class, and subjecting the kids to this yummy hot sweet dessert. Deep fried dough balls soaked in sweet syrup, they should just give up and get used to me forcing new strange foods on them, because I don't plan on stopping.

 

Best way to finish off a fantastic Indian buffet!

 

Posted on February 14, 2013 and filed under At home, Food, Nature, recipe.

Good ole outdoor winter cooking!

So before we get into the winter cooking I want to go back 6 months to whne a friend stumbled upon a great little outdoor wooden stove online. We both think that we could sruvive for weeks in the forrest with just our wits and a hatchet, so this stove was like candy to us.

Stovetec sells numerous stoves and such but we were fixated on the 2 door recreational stove. We talked big and made palns but our pizazz petered off and we forgot about it. Then one faithful day in November last year he email ed me and said "I am getting myself one for Christmas! Do you want one?". 

"Yes please!!! You are getting the one with two doors right?" I asked. A few shortly weeks later we were in possesion of out new beautiful mean green wood burning stoves. 

NOw fast forward to last weekend when we were lookign at my daughters Brownies book to see what Brownie badge she would like to try for this month. And we fell upon the Outdoor Cookout badge. Now my mind opened up and shot straight to the Stovetec stove that had beenin the garage for a few weeks now and had not been used, and that was it!

Our daughter wrote a list of the materials she would need and proceeded to gather them up and get ready.

we are now ready to cook in the snow!

So the oldest attempting to earn a badge was in chage of the whoel endeavour, and I was the safety officer. Most of my conversations ended with "...and then you will burn the house down."

After she cleared a spot on the deck (don't worry a good 1.5 feet from teh house) and placed a board to hold everything we all got excited to light the stove and get a water-boiling-on!

burn baby burn! and once hte fire was lit and hte bottom door closed the flames dropped and the heat roared.And then we had to wait, which seemed to take forever, for about 10 minutes until the water began to roll and boil. 

Only the hardiest of outdoor winter chefs sit on a purple IKEA chair.

The stove does have an adjustable sleeve, that you can see surrounding hte pot of water, that focuses the heat onto the pot or pan used to cook with, the tiny pot we used had a low handle which would not allow us to tighten the sleeve snuggly to the pot. So I would guess that with a tight fit on the pot it would have reduced te boiling time by a few minutes.

Well with the macaroni in thewater and steam rising all over the palce we were one excited bunch. And htat made me.....beside myself with pleasure!!! I hoped they would enjoy this, and I hoped even more that this would actually work. And I was pretty proud of myself when she had a huge smile stirring the macaroni.

the miners came out hte hills that afternoon. Drawn by the smell of the famous Elbow Noodles a la Torgerson. Their fascination with the stove was first, second was watching the wooden spoon steam after stirring the noodles.

After we successfully cooked a wee pot of noodles we went on to thfe best food eveer...boiled weiners. YUM!

THe middle guy was sooo excited to stir the hot dogs and talk almost not stop in the 5 minutes it took to 'cook' them, about camping, cooking,  fire, pots, wood, fire again, steam, spoons, steaming spoons, and how he could cook all our suppers like this, even tea!

"...the water we would get from a stream that was by the tent. And then I would cook supper with it, and wash dishes in it, and then we would build a bridge over the stream so we could play soccer in the field on the other side...."It was a lot of fun and the weather made it absolutly awesome. The amazing thing about the stove that I haven't mentioned was that all we used was 4 short pieces of wood, maybe an inch around and 10 inces long, to cook the noodles nad the hot dogs. 

So it would even come in handy when the zombies come and you don't want to be out with the hordes gathering armfuls of wood for every meal.

Posted on January 30, 2013 and filed under Activities, At home, Food, Nature, Weekend.

I love Cheeeese! we went to a cheese farm today.

Little guy in a giant wooden shoe outside the Dutch Grocer

The evil waves will be defeated by Weenie the Brave

Trying to catch lunch at Dinghy Dong Dock Pub

Chowing on the chowder!

Kids loved the bunnies at the Cheeseworks.

Making a doomed sand castle as the tide is coming in

So we are going to combine yesterday and today into one epic, monstrous post! And as well we are going to have a contest, details at the end of the post.

Yesterday we booked it out of Sooke bright and early and headed back to Nanaimo. Along the way we stopped at a little art gallery just off the highway.

During our trip our oldest has been taking an interest in totem poles, as we have come across a lot of amazing ones on the Island. And in Sooke she found a piece of drift wood and said she was going to make a totem pole, she used her markers and made a cute little totem pole of her own.

So Mom and her went into the little art gallery and came out with a nice little replica totem pole for her to keep in her room.

By the time we got to Nanaimo it was lunch time, so we hopped on the ferry and went to Protection Island in the Nanaimo harbour for lunch at Dinghy Dock Pub. It is the only restaurant on the island and it is at the end of the dock that the ferry uses, so the kids loved that they ate lunch at a floating restaurant, and they serve pretty good meals too. Mom had a tuna sandwich and Dad had to try their clam chowder and then ate a honey ginger glazed salmon salad with a wasabi dressing!!  

A really neat thing for the kids is that they have a place outside where we sat where the kids could fish. They had little fishing poles and line with corn on the end. Little fish kept coming by and nibbling but no one took the bait and was caught. But it did not stop the kids from trying and trying and trying and trying.

We did not get back to our home base in Nanaimo until late afternoon so Mom ran out for some groceries while the kids played and relaxed for the rest of the day.

And of course Mom and Dad rocked the tea on the deck in the evening relaxing and enjoying the scenery.

Today, we had a much busier day because we had no travelling to accomplish. We started out by heading to Qualicum and checked out their beach. Because the tide was just about all the way back in the kids played in the sand and were constantly being pushed back closer to land every few minutes as the ocean kept washing their shoes away from the dry spot they had placed them.

We think the little guy was still choked about getting thrashed in Tofino because he had a wooden sword and was very angry at each wave as it crawled up the beach at him, and it ended in tears when the ocean first took the kids shoes from an earlier dry spot and slowly washed them about.

After we were evicted from the beach by the water the kids voted and we decided to go to Parksville and play at their playground and spray park.

On our way there we came across a sign that read,

"Moonberry Winery and Little Qualicum Cheeseworks"

So we of course veered off the highway and searched for this amazing combination of a place. What we found was perfect! It was a dairy farm that produced cheese and also made wine, AND they also had a cool self guided tour for kids that was a scavenger hunt taking us all around the farm to get different stamps for each clue. The kids played with a few rabbits they had, they saw some baby dairy cows, which caused the youngest to shout "Be-be Kow! Be-be kow!", over and over again for a good 10 minutes, even after we left the cows.

We were able to see the barn where they milk the cows and check out the horses they have on hand for trail rides, all in all a great stop.

Oh, and we ate cheese! The kids were sooo excited to be at cheese farm because they could then tell a friend of theirs, who LOVES cheese, that they were at a cheese farm.

So we left the Cheeseworks with a bottle of wine and some cheese and finally found ourselves at the playground and spray park in Parksville.

2 hours later we packed up and drove off with a van full or rosy cheeked kids, and stopped again at that nice little restaurant Avo's Eatery in Parksville. Mom had the Santa Fe wrap with broccoli sprouts and carmelized onions and Dad had an avocado, tomato, and Asian salad on noodles. We both agreed that Mom's was the best!

On our way back to Nanaimo we were again sidetracked!

A sign that read,

"70 flavours of Licorice" caught our eyes. Sooo we pulled off the highway again and found a neat little Dutch grocery that indeed had at least 70 different flavours of licorice. The kids dug through the bulk bins and selected quite the assortment of licorice tp give Grandpa once we get home. And the nice lady who owned the store gave the kids a bag of chocolate soccer balls and Dad a dried farmers sausage.

The kids loved the chocolate but the large farmers sausage made Dad's stomach feel - bletch!

Once finally home we ate a buffet of random foods we had on hand, had a quick evening dip in the hot tub and then bath and off to bed with the lot of them.

Tomorrow we leave the Island, which will be a sad moment. We had a hell of a good time here and I think we would all galdly spend another couple weeks checking out what it has to offer.  

But it works out well for us because tomorrow we are going to meet up with someone in the family who the kids adore and have a super fun time in Vancouver at an amusement park.

Thanks for a good time Vancouver Island, stay classy!

 

Now for the CONTEST!!!!

We have so far taken a lot of pictures on vacation, and more than a few of them are completely ridiculous! So we thought it would be fun to have a caption contest.

Take a look at the picture below and in the comments section below write your best caption for the picture. I don't think there will be a prize but we can all enjoy the stupid and silly captions that everyone comes up with.

What's your best caption for this picture?

Posted on July 12, 2012 and filed under B.C., Beach, Farm, Food, Nature, Ocean, Park, Summer Vacation, farmers market.

Eating what we 'catch'

   A wee breaking of our fast on the front porch in Sooke.

  Morning walk on Wiffin Spit in Sooke. Wiffin Spit from our pilotless drone that came with our new Nikon D3200. We are that dark spot beside that light area. 

Our first pothole we splashed in, nice and shallow here.

A little dip in the second pothole we visited. Being submerged in the icy water was quite the shock to the human body!

Our youngest did not want to part with his egg that he picked.

After dropping and cracking his precious egg he was more than happy to eat it!

Our middle child prepared with the lid in case the crab escaped the transfer.

Our first morning in the cabin in Sooke was pretty decent, except for the early birds wanting their worms. But it seems that when in a cabin or camping early mornings are a guaranteed occurrence.

We started off with pancakes, waffles and toast and some strong (new coffee makers are always fun to learn) and finished off on the front porch planning our day.

We first headed off to the natural peninsula in the Sooke Inlet called Wiffin Spit, cue the wild crazy laughter from our oldest boy. It is a full kilometer long and almost stretches across the whole opening of the inlet. We were advised that is was a good spot to see sea otters, sea lions, and seals.

After a good hike out on Wiffin Spit, and disturbing many early morning walkers peaceful stroll, we headed back with nothing to be seen.

Until we spied two sea otters diving and swimming near the shore! The kids were excited and watched them for a good 53 seconds and were then off to the Boardwalk down the coast a bit.

The board walk was a cool little walk down a bunch of stairs and then along the coast for a couple hundred yards. It was a great view of the inlet and is supposed to be a great place to watch whales that happen by the area, no sea animals for us though.  We dis meet a nice boxer named Lola though.  She was rescued by the "Without Borders Boxer Rescue" and taken in by this super nice family when she was only a pup.

Once we made it back to the van we were off to the destination that everyone was excited to see...the Meadery!!!

I think it is called a meadery?

There is a little farm outside of Sooke that is a honey farm and a meadery (they make their own mead!) called the Tugwell Creek Farm and Meadery. After our trek down the coastline we found out that meaderies are closed on Tuesdays. Crap.

So we went back to the cabin to drown our sorrows in lunch, and a nap for the wee one.

After the rest we were off to what the locals called the Potholes, well I gues the government calls them the potholes too because it is called the Sooke Potholes Regional Park. But this is a place along the Sooke river where over many years the water has worn away the rock to form these little pools along the bank that are great for swimming.

So we vanned it up to the park and hiked down to two of the different pools. They we great!

The water was cold, clean, and clear. It was a popular place for people to hop in a tube and float around, swim the little pools (the first one was about 100 feet wide and in the middle we couldn't see the bottom), or to bask on the pebbly beaches.

It was a great afternoon in the sun. And we are amazed at how many different places to swim we have found that have been absolutely different than each other.

It was supper time by the time we left the potholes (which by the way look absolutly nothing like a pothole.) and so we were going ot stop for some fresh prawns at one place and some lettuce at another.

At the first stop we bought some prawns but Dad, in his wisdom, also bought a live 2 lbs Dungeness Crab to boil and eat.

At the second stop we bought some mixed fresh greens and jam and in talking to the owners Ellen and Dick ended up spending an hour and a half touring their farm. It turns out Ellen is from Saskatchewan and has been turning her little plot into her little prairie oasis.

She has a great garden (which she plants wheat and oats!), a few sheep, some goats (which they milk and make cheese out of), a few geese and ducks, a dwindling flock of chickens (a pesky racoon has been taking the hens), and a great little orchard of fruit and nut trees!

This was an absolute fantastic evening! The kids got to pick eggs from the coop, eat mulberries and thimble berries, feed the goats, see all the trees (they spun around the mulberry bush, and picked artichokes from their garden.

Ellen and Dick, or Grandpa Dick and Grandma Ellen as they introduced themselves to the kids, were amazing, and sweet to the kids. Ellen showed everything to the kids and did not just talk to the adults and even picked up our youngest and excitedly walked him to the almond tree they had.

If you are even in Sooke keep your eyes open for a little sign that mentions fresh veggies and baking, Ellen and Dick are busy people (their veggie and baking stand in the yard is a self serve and pay deal with a slotted tin to put your money in) so hopefully you get the opportunity to meet them!

We wantd the kids to eat the eggs they had gathered so we planned on making some scrambled eggs with supper, except our little guy had different ideas. He did not want to part with his egg. He carried it back to the cabin and would not hand it over. But he ended up cracking it pretty good when he was playing with it and toy car he had. Then he was ready for the circle of life to take place, once he realized that the egg that he had gathered from the hen house was nothing but...an egg.

Supper was a buffet of sandwiches, salad, scrambled eggs, veggies, crab legs (receipe below), prawns, hot dogs, and yogurt tubes. We ended the evening with a marshmallow roast over a little fire and plopped the kids to bed before 9:00 pm.

We did end up finding some of the local mead at a pub in town, so Dad enjoyed a glass of honey mead and Mom a cup of tea.

Tomorrow we are back to Nanaimo for two nights then homeward bound.

 

Dad's Not Famous Crab recipe

ingredients

1 -2 lbs dungeness crab - as live as possible

1 big pot

lots of water

1 stove

 

First you put lots of water in the big pot. Then you put them both on the stove and boil.

Once the lots of water is boiling, place the as live as possible crab in the water, bottom down, and slam lid on pot as fast as possible so you don't have to see the angry crab boil.

After 20 minutes remove cooked crab and consume!

Posted on July 12, 2012 and filed under B.C., Food, Garden, Nature, Ocean, Park, Summer Vacation, farmers market, forest, recipe.

Scare the Kids

Whitewood Beach

Sundaes on the Deck

Let's go back to Sunday now shall we...

It was super nice out in Nanaimo, so we decided to head to the beach.  There is a lake just within Nanaimo called 'Westwood Lake'.  It was so pretty with huge trees, you would never know you were in a city.  There were lifeguards on duty and a nice area roped off for swimming. the beach was nice as well with lots of sand, and the total beach was probably 100 yards along the shore.  The water was quite cold, yikes, but we had fun. Our oldest even swam out ot the anchored raft with Dad, even though she "...couldn't see the bottom of the lake!", she said. 

Our youngest was super exhausted afterwards so Dad took the older 2 to "Brave" the new Disney movie. Sounded like a great thing to do...except for the massive scary bear in the movie that freaked them out!

It wouldn't have freaked them out as badly if they hadn't seen bears in the wild a couple days earlier. The evil bear followed them to Sooke a few days later where we learnt "...there are more bears here than anywhere else in BC."

Terrifying bear movie while in bear country....Good one Dad!

We cooked a super BBQ supper of chicken, hot dogs, asparagus, corn on the cob, and then made sundaes with homemade chocolate sauce, gummy bears and reeses pieces for dessert. 

We tucked the kids in early to bed so that we would be ready for Victoria and Sooke in the morning!

......

Then with everyone asleep Mom and Dad enjoyed some wine we had found on our way through Kelowna. If we both loved wine, instead of just liking it, we would have had more than the one bottle, because it was a great evening to sit on the deck and watch the ferry do it's thing in the Nanaimo harbour.

 

Posted on July 11, 2012 and filed under B.C., Beach, Lake, Nature, Park, Summer Vacation, forest, ice cream.

A racoon ass kicking and lots of crabs

Our day started off early (as usual) so we went to hang out on the deck. 

every kids dream, a canon ride!

playing at the park on the harbour in Nanaimo

just starting our trek to the ocean's edge

In the shallow tide pools the water was nice and warm.

having a blast in the water

The family enjoying supper at a local joint just after leaving the beach

We got quite the treat while eating pancakes.  2 baby deer and 3 adult deer were playing in the yard, they were only a few metres away from us, but on the other side of the fence (this fence offers little to no protection we learned as this evening we saw one jump the fence quite easily).  Then Mr. Raccoon came back and put on a little show for the kids climbing trees.

We decided to start the day and hit downtown Nanaimo today and check out the harbour.  Seeing all of the boats was very cool.  It is so different for the kids.  They wanted to explore everything.  We grabbed lattes and walked the docks and enjoyed the dragon boat races that were taking place in the harbour.  There was a massive playground that was neat and the kids played their hearts out all morning. 

By 11:00 am they were exhausted.

We planned it out so that we went to Parksville when the tide was out.  The tidal pools were unbelievable!

They freaked the kids out though. First they took off full tilt into the first one and were shocked to see tiny little crabs running around, clams and sand dollars (none of which they have ever seen up close before).  Then they all wanted to be carried, yeah right! 

It took awhile for them to realize there was nothing to be afraid of, then they were ready to explore.  They collected a whole bucket of neat shells and helped save some sand dollars by putting them back into the water. We walked close to 300 yards through the tide pools and sand until they were able to swim in the ocean. We ended up hanging out on an island of sand right at the oceans edge and created worm habitats as we dug in the sand. We realized it was time to walk back to land once water began to creep up and was going to flood our bag and blanket in a few minutes time.

The kids were amazed to see the tide come back in!

Not only was the beach amazing at Parksville, but they had an unbelievable playground and spray park. The kids didn't want to leave. We spent so much time playing there that the kids were starving and ready for supper. Even though we had planned on BBQing, we instead stopped at a very neat restaurant that we stumbled upon by accident. Avos was the name, and avocados was its' game.

We had fresh chips and salsa sitting out on the patio. Our oldest son ate his weight in prawns. The kid meals were awesome and came with fruit and veggies and dip and juice.  The kids had grilled cheese and chicken quesadillas.  Mom and Dad shared a Baha salad with avocados, beans and sprouts and fish tacos with mexican rice and refried beans.  They were amazing!!!

The other amazing thing today is that it is Mom and Dad's 11th anniversary! It was a great way to spend a day like today, we relaxed, we played, and we had a great time together.

And it was as if the racoons in the backyard this evening knew that today was a special day, because they put on a 3 minute show as 2 racoons proceeded to kick the ever loving s*** out of a third racoon who had wandered by.

Gotta love what vacations throw at you.

Posted on July 7, 2012 and filed under B.C., Beach, Nature, Ocean, Park, Summer Vacation, Van.

only 1 kid threw up

A standard Ogopogo picture is needed.

Ferry ride to the IslandOur oldest enjoying Little Qualicum Falls. 

Our first foray onto the beach

Kids having fun, extreme insanity building....

All living s*** opens up and our oldest fella regresses 50,000 years!

Now we didn`t forget  to post about our day yesterday, we just wish we could forget about it.

We headed out of Kelowna early and hit the road for Vancouver.  It was a long drive for the kids, which made it a long drive for us! 

We checked into our hotel in North Vancouver.  It was a bit of a dive (so we al together left it off the hotel ratings for this summer), but supposively close to all of the attractions and close to the Ferry.  We dropped off our stuff and took off for the 5 minute drive to the Aquarium. 

But after 40 minutes of waiting to drive  the 3 blocks onto the bridge that would take us close to the Aquarium we decided it was best to go back to the hotel. I guess everyone in Vancouver also wanted to take the bridge to Stanley Park. The 1 km drive back took another 35 minutes.  We learned our lesson, driving in Vancouver is not the same as driving at home. The kids loved the pool though and didn`t want to get out, even for supper.

So we learned another lesson, book the ferry earlier than a day in advance.  When we went to book the Ferry over to Nanaimo our only options left were 6:20 a.m. and 9:30 p.m. 

6:20 a.m. it was! 

We packed up the night before and set the alarm for 4:15 a.m.  The kids loved the Ferry though.  Mom and Dad wanted to stay out on the outer deck, but the kids were more comfy in the big chairs on the inside of the boat.  We had brought breakfast with us, which was smart.

And they served delicious hot coffee.....so hot and delicious.

We got off of the Ferry at 8 a.m. and saw that Tofino was only 200 + km away so we made the silly decision to head to Tofino.  It took 4 hours to drive!!! 

We are still glad we went though.

The road to Tofino can be summed up by the warning signs of: Caution:  Narrow Winding Road.  Twisting and turning through the most beautiful forest ever! The trees were huge and we even saw 2 black bears.  We made a couple of stops on the trip, one to Little Qualicum Falls which was a super great little hike (lots of stairs, but easy terrain) and the goats on the roof in Coombs.  What a cool gimmick the goats are. 

The store is super neat and has lots of stuff and really reasonable rates.  The kids found wooden pop guns...you can imagine how long they lasted in the van before we had to threaten to take them away.  The bakery was also super neat and they had lots of food and garden stuff.  Dad ended up buying salmon jerky, home made granola bars, and a spinach brioche, so damn yummy!!!

Very fun stop! Worth it for sure for a few groceries or a lunch stop.

After we finally reached Tofino, but not before someone couldn`t hold his pre-lunch down going around all the little twists and turns in the road, the drive seemed worth it. 

Even with the sweet stick of barf mostly aired out of the van we stopped at the Tacofino stand for lunch, someone told us it was their choice for best fish tacos.

Ding Ding!!!

We ordered 1 fish taco, 1 bean taco, 3 cheese gringas (quesadillas), 1 mango-coconut smoothie, 1 mint-lime freshie, and 1 lemon-ginger freshie. It was amazing! The fish taco was hands down the best thing we have had in the fresh locally made food category. The little Tacofino truck pumped out a lot of tacos but they were lined up down the parking lot. We waited 30 minutes for our order, and they were moving to get everything out!

After lunch our little prairie children went nuts in the ocean.  Our youngest spent the entire time running out to the waters edge and then running away as the waves came.  He did this for a long time until he tripped and a wave caught up to him.  He had sand everywhere.  After that he yelled `bad water`and threw sand at the waves.  The other 2 ran and screamed and giggled.  They loved everything about it, the waves, the sand, the shells.  The were filthy and loving it!

It was great to see them experience something new and so different to what they have even done. There is something magical about waves and surf.

The drive back was long...but we did it!  We made it back to Nanaimo and went to a friends place to stay.  The graciously let us stay in their new house before they even move in.  It is on the side of a mountain overlooking the harbour!  It is insanely cool.  Tonight from the hot tub on their deck we saw a baby deer and a racoon.

Today was long but amazing!!!!

 

Posted on July 6, 2012 and filed under B.C., Beach, Hotel, Nature, Ocean, Summer Vacation, Van, forest.

first full day in a city, Kelowna beware!

The Kelowna Farmers Market

The indoor pool in Kelowna, those windows fold up and the whole wall is open to the green space.

View from balcony in Kelowna. Pool indoors and hot tubs outdoors.

The oldest enjoying a picnic in Kelowna at a Regional park.

Our strawberry haul from the u-pick farm.

The little one saying "hello!' to the baby kangaroo in Kelowna.

A beautiful picture of our girl and an albino kangaroo baby!

We started off today by not packing the van to head out of town, but instead we packed a picnic lunch and planned a day in Kelowna.

We could write a whole post about the farmers market here in town, but we will limit it to just a few comments. It was fantabulous! Below is a list of what we bought;

- carrots, 3 bunches
- peas, 1 bag to be shelled and eaten in hotel
- cucumbers, 2 for snacking later
- kale crisps, 1 small bag of dehydrated kale crisps
- cheese bun, 1 bun that the young one selected
- lemon aid, 1 cup fresh squeezed that was selected by the middle kid
- cookie, 1 coco cookie that was selected by the oldest
- spinach buns, 3 spinach stuffed buns
- sweet and sour gluten, 1 order of soya gluten that was crispy, chewy and awesome
- cookies, a whole pack of coco cookies that everyone loved
- pumpkin seed brittle, 1 small bag of pumpkin seed brittle, so damn good
- chocolate mint ice 'cream', 1 cup of coconut milk ice cream that is 100% local and organic
- quinoa granola, secret recipe of quinoa granola that was crunchy and good
- cheese cake, 3 bite sized pieces of organic frozen cheese cake

Whew!

And we would have bought much more. There was so much fantastic booths and food trucks. And the kids enjoyed the kids magician that put on a show for all the kids at the farmers market. Check it out if you are in Kelowna on Wednesdays or Saturdays.

Then we found a awesome winery in Kelowna called House of Rose. www.houseofrose.ca. The owner was super nice, she walked us through the wines she had and Mom was able to sample a few. And we walked out of there with 3 bottles of wine and a map she gave us showing a u pick strawberry patch.

The strawberry patch was awesome. It was very hard keeping the boys from eating more than they picked, but they managed to collect 7 pounds of strawberries in 10 minutes...the juiciest, sweetest strawberries ever. The boys could barely eat their picnic lunch after eating as many strawberries as they could in the van on the way to the park. The left overs served as a wonderful topping on angel food cake back at the hotel.

Who knew that we would find kangaroos in Kelowna (that was not on the BINGO card)? We checked out a fun place called Kangaroo Creek Farm. The owners lovingly care for wallabies, kangaroos, goats and other animals. The kids got to feed a kangaroo and hold a baby kangaroo that was in a makeshift pouch. It is nice to see the kids interacting with animals. Our youngest had to crouch down at every animals and say "hello baby".

When it is 18 degrees and you are walking past an amazing spray park...decisions, decisions...but how can you say no when you also feel like jumping in there too? Needless to say, after a supper of cereal and fruit in the room we checked out ogopogo and went to the spray park (fully clothed, we had extra clothes in the can though).

Our middle was convinced that if he captured a picture of the real Ogopogo that he would, of course, be famous. He carried his camera around all day and told more than a dozen strangers how he was going to find Ogopogo. When we got to the lake though, he gave the camera back. He had decided that after he took the picture, a big limo would probably come and take him to a new hotel and then he would miss his family.

Great city and surrounding area Kelowna is! We could easliy stay for another 2 days. Next stop, the couv!

 

Posted on July 4, 2012 and filed under B.C., Hotel, Nature, Park, Summer Vacation, farmers market.

Canmore, Giant Cedar, a drive and then Revelstoke!

So our morning in Canmore began very early, our middle kid was awake at 5:00! We tried to convince him to go go back to bed because it was waaaay to early for a hotel. Around 5:30 Dad got up with him and they went outside to not wake up everyone else. When we returned a few minutes later the young one was up!

So the three walk to Tim Hortons for a muffin and a coffee.

We had many other highlights for the day.

We left Canmore and headed towards Revelstoke. It was a slightly rainy day so the drive was a wet, lush and green one. We stopped at a few small streams and gathered some rocks and threw some rocks.

And we came across Giant Cedar.....the coolest damn place ever!! It was just off highway #1 but it was the farthest thing from pavement and RVs. It was a fantastic rain forest walk along a boardwalk. It was a lot of stairs that took you up the mountain a few hundred yards to an amazing cedar forest. The kids were good and enjoyed the walk and the old fallen trees, but it would be easy to lose their intest if you don't keep them engaged in the walk.

Giant Cedar was Dads highlight so far!

We also did a a forest walk to a 'rock garden', which was about 20 minutes long. It was on a a rougher path than Giant Cedar but the kids liked being able to walk and climb through the forest more. The rock garden was actually a deposit of old massive boulders that were covered in moms and lichen. Super fun as well, a lot more interactive and active.

Then it was in the Revelstoke after braving the last day of the long weekend traffic. It was raining and grey so we did not get to walk and see much of Revelstoke. But we did enjoy the Best Western Wayside Inn!!!

It was very new and had some very cool features that sets it off from others. It had a 6:00 am continental breakfast (great for early risers).

It also had an outside heated pool, outside warmer pool and an outside hot tub. Which was amazing because it was Gary and raining outside. But the best part of the hotel were the facilities. The pool change rooms were stellar, the breakfast area was clean, spacious, and the room was very nice and modern.

One thing lacking in town may have been the restaurants, though we ended up finding Emos pizza.....yes Emos. And to our dismay it was not staffed with long banged, pale, pantera shirt wearing teens. The food and service was very good though.

Busy day with a tough drive but a great end to the day sitting in the hot tub in the rain.

The hotel rates like this:

Best Western Wayside Inn

Room 5/5 (it was a good size and had amazing beds!)


Pool 4/5 (the pools were great, very clean and maintained. Only tick against it was no waterslide, but it is nice to sometimes not have a waterslide.)


Location 3/5 (it was just inside town so it was easy to find, but it was not really close to anything that we could walk to.)


Hotel 5/5 (a great place, the plaque said it was the #6 Best Western in Canada, and we agree!)

Posted on July 3, 2012 and filed under Alberta, B.C., Hotel, Nature, Summer Vacation, Van, forest.

Canada's Birthday

Mom getting her feet wet in a cold mountian stream

The kids enjoying the refreshing splash in the mountian strem.

Our oldest boy looking out of the gondola in Banff.

The kids waiting for a Parisian Waffle in Canmore

A little cotton candy at the Canada Day celebration in Canmore.

A little Boston Pizza art to share with the world.

The view from our hotel balcony.

The view on our hotel balcony as we read books before bed.

Today started with a bang. Everyone was awake by 5:30....I guess that is the down fall of being asleep by 7:00 the night before. Instead of waiting 3.5 hours till the pool opened the family decided to get going to check out the mountains and get a start to our day.

We were exploring kananaskis village by 7:00 am. And on our way back to Highway 1 we came across a waterfall at the side of the road. It was awesome to see the kids put their feet in the water and try to come up with ideas as to why the water was so damn cold.

We also stopped the at a Texas gate and let the kids loose at figuring its' purpose. It took them a few minutes and some wild ideas like " a place where animals can hide under and get away from the cars." or "this is so I can balance on these.", and our middle child began to tightrope walk across the gate.

Then it was on to Banff and the sulphur mountain gondola. When we pulled in it was getting a bit busy, but we had almost no wait at the bottom and the top to get on the gondola. Both of us, Mom and Dad, were a bit worried as we started off but all the kids did great! Our middle one was crazy excited and was yelling and twitchy eyes. We were not the most prepared for the fact that the weather was going to be colder up top, we forgot our youngest one's hoodie. And he just kept saying "burrrr, cold. Burrrr, cold."

Then it was off to Canmore for some Canada Day celebrations. We walked around town, ate ice cream, ate cotton candy, ate Parisian waffles...and even ate birthday cake. The town was alright too. Then believe or not we even ate lunch.

Then we checked into the Best Western in Canmore and proceeded to go straight to the pool.

Meh.

The pool was alright, would be even better if the kids were a few years older. The was no shallow end and the waterslide launched the kids out at Mach 2. But the best part of the hotel was the balcony. We read books on it, we ate snacks on it, and at 10:30 we even were able to watch the fireworks. It was a great end to the day.

Except we then watched some bad rom com on cable way to late and we are currently regretting we stayed up for it.

Overall the hotel rates:

Best Western in Canmore

Room 3/5 (clean and roomy, but a bit old and dated)


Pool 4/5 (it is still. A good pool, slide and hot tub. But not quite suited to younger kids)


Location 5/5 (on the main drag in town and nice and close to restaurants and grocery stores)


Hotel 3/5 (we would stay here again but would likely look somewhere else next time for a place with a cool pool)

Tomorrow we are off to Big Cedar and Revelstoke.

Posted on July 1, 2012 and filed under Alberta, Hotel, Nature, Park, Summer Vacation, Van, forest.

Where are all the carrots?

On Sunday we ventured out ot the farm again to check up on how the little seeds have been doing these past 2 weeks since we planted them.

To the kids dismay there were no towering rows of corn, or rows thick with carrots.

give it 6 weeks and it will look delicious!But the kids were happy enough once Grandpa got the riding mower and the Gator out of the quonset. If the battery hadn't have run out, and Grandpa changed it, and then the other battery didn't run out the kids would have been on it all morning. 

Bringing some snacks to the hungry gardeners.

Grandpa showing the boys how to switch out the Gators' battery.

 

Posted on June 4, 2012 and filed under Farm, Garden, Nature, Weekend.

"Dad there is a bird on the fence and..."

This past Sunday it was raining and windy all day. The weather was what I imagine it being like on a stereotypical day living in Labrador; cold driving grey rain, having to put on my bright yellow slicker to go and check the lighthouse light, as my  bushy beet red thick beard keeps my face warm, while my sheep dog Séamus follows me faithfully and my clutch of red haired kids play their fiddles in the livingroom practicing their new single Is binn béal ina thost a new gaelic wonder band The Brambing Ones!

......sorry, a little off topic there.

So it was rainy and windy and cold all day. Around late afternoon we were all bustling about getting ready for supper at our place with Mama and Bop-a. When our oldest girl says "Hey look there is a bird sitting on the fence!" I was a little busy getting ready for supper so I didn't really pay much attention,I did peek out the window and sure enough there was a little bird sitting as flat as it could on the top of our fence, about 4 feet from our living room window.

Wet bird on the fence

After that I dd not pay much attention to the bird. But later that Mom said that our oldest was glued to the window watching the bird get blown about by the wind. She would pipe in every 10 minutes or so "she is just sitting there" and "why is she not flying away?".

About 10 minutes before supper she pulled herself from the window and stopped in the kitchen to say that she thought the bird was tired wet and hungry, and that she decided she has to feed it, and there is bird seed in garage, and that we could put a plate on the fence and then some seed on the plate and then...

"Not now sweetie, it is almost supper. Why don't you go wash your hands." is what I interrupted her elaborate plan with. 

"But Dad she is hungry and if she doesn't get some sup....."

Excuse me, those hands won't wash themselves." I said.

Now before she had a chance to "but Dad" me again, Mom gave me a look and whispered "She is worried about the bird."

Then Mom and her proceeded to discuss a plan about how to best feed the bird. What to feed it? How will we get the food on the fence? What do we put the bird food on? 

Mom had seen how entranced our oldest was with the bird and how concerned she was with it's condition. She realized that even though it was pre-supper time taking these 5 minutes to spread some peanut butter on a slice of bread, sprinkling some bird seed on it and then putting the food near the bird was what our daughter needed. 

She was empathizing with the bird and may have been imagining what it was like to be stuck outside cold and wet. Either way it was fantastic to see her follow through with the plan the two of them had developed and be outside as Mom put the food down.

Who wants a PB and seed sandwich?

The bird took flight and left once they went outside and didn't seem to return. But our daughter checked back at the window throughout the night, and was beaming when she caught some sparrows sneaking a snack of seed and peanut butter.

And on a completely separate note, our youngest spent the full Sunday afternoon playing in the giant cardboard castle that Mom picked up from Sears Bargain Centre.

And your the dirty rascals!Happy rainy Sunday it was!

Posted on May 28, 2012 and filed under At home, Nature.

I know why they are endangered, because they are darn adorable!

We decided to get out of the house first thing this morning (the weather looked like it was not going to cooperate with letting the kids play outside) and go to Moose Jaw. 

Moose Jaw - great little town, lots of old people, temple gardens mineral spa, fun place to spend a day.

We first checked out the Kinsmen Sportsplex in town. It is a great little place. With a waterslide (nice and slow for young kids), full lanes for those who wish they were were Olympic swimmers, a great pool area for toddlers with a Zero Beach Leisure Pool, hot tub, steam room,a decent concession for snacks and light lunches, and 5 family change rooms. 

 

After almost 2 hours of swimming we got dressed and decided to check out the Burrowing Owl centre. Now before you say "Oh boy, burrowing owls...".

But the place is pretty neat. Don't expect to spend the day there, you are really looking at 20 - 30 minutes depending on how much your kids like looking at cages with burrowing owls. 

They have a short eared owl and a row of cages with about 10 burrowing owls. There is also a sand box, a small building wit some owl display, and a place to look for wild life. But these other things are pretty blah and nothing special.

But those damn cute owls make up for it!! They are like little stuffed animals with beaks and talons. Even though they are a bird that can fly, and does, it decides to live underground and run around like tiny evil chickens. 

A young 3 year old burrowing owl.

The oldest ambassador owl, Trooper, was super cool. He flew over from his burrow and sat right at the edge of his enclosure and showed us a leaf he had in his beak.

Posing with the owls

So give it a shot if you have an hour to spare. Check the hours of operations though before you go, they change by the season.

Looking for other wildlife at the burrowing owl centre.

Posted on May 19, 2012 and filed under Moose Jaw, Nature.

Butterflies Are Starting To Butterfly!

Yesterday we had our first butterfly emerge from it's cocoon. I was on my way home from work when my oldest called me on my cell phone. I could barely understand what she was saying over the noise of the boys in the background, but they were looking at their first butterfly.


The hatching chamber!!! or butterfly basket home, which ever works for you.

We had taped all the lids of the tiny containers to the top of the mesh basket that came with the butterflies. We then had to wait about a week for the butterflies to come....


 
Butterfly BF001 - welcome to the world.
The first of the litter, I am sure butterfly babies are a litter of butterflies.

Turns out it is a lek or swarm of butterflies, who knew.

Stay tuned for further developments on the growing butterfly army.
Posted on May 17, 2012 and filed under At home, Nature.