Sunday, April 15, 2012

it's the most wonderful time of the year


it's the day we eat crab legs!


y'all are gonna eat so much crab y'all's gonna be walkin' outa here sideways, clickety-clack across the patio on yer little crab legs. y'all are gonna leave here more crab than person.





in addition to the Diaz trio, we had Doris & Co., and Brian & Liz Gilliland (awesome neighbors, parents to the great Layla and Stephen) to share the feast with. perhaps i should have taken a picture before we ate all the food but, friends, there just wasn't time.

easter sorrow, easter joy


avocado tree, planted March 2012

"fruit cocktail" tree {lemon, lime, mandarin, navel}, planted March 2012

easter 2012

i. am. so. tired.








i just really like this picture.

there's almost nothing more satisfying to me than watching my child actually eat something that i made.

this one i like too. no idea what they're up to. well, i have some idea...probably something to do with bugs or poop.

the science fairest of them all




how do flowers get their color?

“Is it their petals when they keep flapping and squiggling in the wind they get their color?”

“Is it their little stuff inside the middle of the flowers?”

“Could it be their stem (with nectar inside it might make the color)?”


“Giving it lots of different kinds of foods?”

What kind of food? What do you think will happen?

“If I put a white flower in pink lemonade, I think that it will turn pink.”

Did any of the flowers get color from the drinks we gave them?

“Yes. The ones that had the food coloring in; that’s the ones that did get their color."

Did all of the flowers get color?

“No. The ones that drank juices like lemonade and grapefruit juice and grape juice, they did not get their color.”

So, sometimes flowers can get color through their stems?

“Yes. But not always. Sometimes they don’t.”

What happened to the flowers in the food coloring?

‘The food coloring got sucked up with the water and came out [evaporated] through their petals. It’s called transpiration. It means that flowers suck up water up from their stem.”

But wait! Don’t flowers usually drink water?

"Yes!"

Is there food coloring in the rain or in the ground water?

"No!"

So how do the pink flowers get pink and the purple flowers get purple?

Flowers have different chemicals called pigments (colors) inside them. Just like people and other living things, different flowers have different genes (like building blocks) that determine (decide) what pigments they will have.

When light shines on a flower, it reflects into our eyes. The reflected light shows us the flower’s color.

Colors can look different when the amount of light changes. At night, a pink flower’s color might look different than it does in the morning.

My genes are like my Mom’s and Dad’s. “I’ve got peach skin, and I’ve got brown eyes and I’ve got red lips. In pansies I see bluish, purplish, white and yellow and black.”


guess whose science fair project is going to district?!


"First things first. But not necessarily in that order."




Bim is great, really great, but no matter what he does, he can never catch up with me. he just turned 34 and i've been 35 for, like, ever.

this year, to show him how we feel about him, we had a Doctor Who themed birthday, complete with TARDIS, spaceship cakes, themed T-shirts and a black box which tells time. sorry if you don't know what a TARDIS is. i just can't be bothered right now to provide a link...that's on you.

if you're interested in a quick Doctor Who initiation, i recommend the episode "Blink" from season 3 on Netflix. very creepy and watchable for we who are left out of the (supposed) Sci-Fi fun.