Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Screen-Free Week

This coming week (April 30- May 6) is Screen-Free Week.  It seems like a wonderful idea to me — a week to focus on getting kids away from TV screens, ipads, smart phones, apps, games etc and to encourage them to do something more interesting and worthwhile instead. I’m just sad it’s received so little publicity in this area, and that no local events have been organised to ‘raise awareness’.  We’ll be ramping up our ‘screen-free’ efforts this week, however: TV will be totally off-limits, and they’ll be no laptop or smart phone use (by us – the boys are not allowed to play with such things) during the boys’ waking hours.  We’ll see how I survive with no daytime e-mail checking….

Anyone else celebrating Screen Free Week?

Read Full Post »

It’s a bit of a light weekend, coming between Earth Day and the May ramp-up to summer, but there are a few things on:

There are docent led wildflower walks at Edgewood Park on Saturday 28th and Sunday 29th April.  I’m not sure about their suitability for small kids, but they might be worth checking out.  Find the details here.

The Cupertino Cherry Blossom Festival (Sat 28th and Sun 29th) looks fun and promises some kids’ events.  Find more information here.

There is still space in Hidden Villa’s 9.30-10.30am Preschoolers on the Farm Event.  To register, go here.

Read Full Post »

Our search for the perfect local beach continues. This time we tried Bean Hollow State Beach.  This is a gorgeous, rugged little cove a couple of miles south of Pescadero.  It has a number of good points: it’s usually empty, has beautiful, golden sand, has lots of shells and rocks to examine, and there are rocks to scramble across and tidepools to explore (which only disappear at high tide I’m informed).  Furthermore, there’s no parking charge at this beach. On the negative side, it’s very exposed and wind-swept.  Another factor to bear in mind, which you may or may not like, it’s one of the few beaches that allows dogs and, while they are meant to be on a leash, the rule is not observed.

Rugged beauty

We plan to visit again: there was lots for the kids to do and we enjoyed the solitude.

Read Full Post »

For a while now, whenever I looked at the map, I’ve found myself attracted to Wilder Ranch State Park. It just sounded rather cool.  Unable to discover too much about it on the internet, last week I persuaded my family to join me on an expedition to check it out.

What it says on the sign.

History

The Wilder Ranch lands have a long and colourful history.  The watershed was used by the Ohlone Indians for many centuries before the dedication of Mission Santa Cruz (1791) brought European diseases and livestock into the area. In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries the land was used for grazing, and slaughtering, mission cattle and became known as “Rancho Arroyo del Matadero” or “ranch of the streambed slaughtering ground.” A parcel that contained the current state park was later owned by a Russian sailor who had abandoned his ship, naturalized as a Mexican citizen and who divided his time between raising livestock and smuggling, and subsequently by a dairy farmer who sold fancy butter in San Francisco.  It was purchased by Deloss D Wilder in 1871 and his family ran a successful dairy farm there right up until 1969.  California State Parks acquired the property in 1974 to preserve the landscape and the historic ranch.

The aloe grove

What’s there now?

Wilder Ranch State Park is enormous — 7000 acres–and is mostly wilderness with many interesting looking hikes.  I’m told there is a beautiful trail that leads along the cliffs but it’s too long to do with small children unless one carpools (and if anyone is interested in doing that…drop me a line).  The park also contains an historic ranch which is easily accessible by car and a short walk.  One can tour the old farm house, watch historic cooking in action (and sample the baked goods), check out the farm animals, and examine the old farm buildings.  There’s a really nice smithy and wood work shop which fascinated all the men in my group, young and old. It contained a Pelton water wheel constructed by the original Mr Wilder himself in 1889 and which the docents enthusiastically operated for us.  But best of all are the ranch’s gardens–they’re fantastic for small boys to play in.  There are giant aloe groves riddled with secret tunnels and pathways for little ones to explore, and this incredible tree which my boys could have played in all day:

Quite a tree

A good day out for toddlers?

Yes and no.  Our kids loved the gardens and would have stayed there all day — that alone was worth the $10 parking fee — and they were happy to explore the farm buildings with us for a while (especially when they found the tractor barn). But the hiking available was not terribly preschooler friendly, and was just too much even for our intrepid pair.  I would say that the park alone isn’t worth a trip from Silicon Valley for kids this age, but it would make a fun stop if you were in the area.  Wilder Ranch would, however, be an interesting hiking destination for older kids so it’s going on my list of ‘hikes for the future.’

Read Full Post »

Saturday 21st April

Menlo Park Kite Day at Bedwell-Bayfront Park, noon-4pm.

Earth Day on the Bay, 10am-5pm. See details here.

Touch a Truck in Redwood City, 10am-2pm. Check out the flyer here.

Fitzgerald Marine Reserve Earth Day Beach Clean Up. 9am-noon. Meet at Mirada Surf.

Sunday 22nd April

Sheep Shearing Day at Ardenwood Farm, 11am-3pm. $6 adults, free for the unders 4s.

Earth Day Celebration at Full Circle Farm in Sunnyvale, 11am-4pm. Find the flyer here.

Los Altos Hills Earth Day Celebration — featuring big cats – 1pm to 4pm at Westwind Community Barn, Los Altos. Information here.

Earth Day at Curi-Odyssey, noon – 5pm. More here.

Read Full Post »

Now these are some good aspirations for our kids courtesy of the UK’s National Trust.

Read Full Post »

All Weekend

South Bay Historical Railroad Society’s Model Train Fair, Santa Clara, 10am-5pm. Adults $5, kids free. See here for details.

Saturday 14th April

Tartan Day Scottish Fair at Ardenwood Farm, 10am-5pm. $10 adults, $5 kids, under threes are free.

Earth Day at Oakland Zoo. See here for details.

Wildflower Walks at Edgewood Park. More details here.

Birding at Bedwell Bayfront Park, 10.30am – 12.30pm. See here.

Tuesday 17th April

Toddler Time at Ardenwood Farm (sheep), 11-11.30am.

Read Full Post »

A new study on the American preschooler and the outdoors has a few interesting findings.  Alongside its conclusion that most preschoolers get insufficient active outdoors playtime (which is, by now, pretty well documented), it suggests that stay at home parents are generally worse than preschools at getting kids outside, that parents who exercise themselves are more likely to exercise with their kids, and that girls play outside much less than boys.  This last one is the one I find most disturbing.  This early lack of outdoors play seems to set bad foundations for female health.  Not having girls, and being an outdoorsy kind of girl myself, I can’t really guess at the reasons why toddler girls are not going outside. Is it a natural difference, parental expectations or societal pressure? Mothers of girls…?

Read Full Post »

Coming Up…

Most events planned for this weekend seem to have been cancelled for rain.

Advance Notice

Sunday 1st April – there’s  morning farm tour at Hidden Villa. Register here.

Sunday May 13th, Mother’s Day Celebration at Hidden Villa. Register here.

Read Full Post »

Not knowing anything about this park other than that it’s reported to be quite beautiful, we took the opportunity one sunny spring afternoon to check it out.  We were totally surprised by what we found: not by the scenery which was stunning, but by the park’s history.  Did you know that Alum Rock Park used to be one of the most famous health spas in America? We didn’t. Between 1890 and 1932 it was operated commercially as a spa retreat and thousands of visitors rode the Alum Rock Steam Railroad to reach its mineral baths, indoor swimming pool, tea rooms, restaurants, and dance pavilion. It actually became so popular after the Second World War that the commercial enterprise started to damage the preserve and the health spa had to be shut down.  What’s left now is a beautiful natural preserve with paths that wind in and out of abandoned mineral baths.  It has a strange sort of Romanesque beauty and is most interesting to poke around.

Appian Way, San Jose

Alum Rock Park is basically a canyon in the Diablo Range foothills.  It’s long and narrow with trails winding through the canyon connecting various picnic areas, abandoned spas and interpretive centers, and more isolated trails on the steep hill sides above. While appealing to grown ups, the wild, narrow, steep trails on the gorge sides are not suitable for toddlers and we gave them a pass for now, preferring to explore the shady canyon floor.

Signs within the park are scarce and park maps are hard to come by on a busy day and not terribly helpful if you do find one (very small scale with few land marks indicated).  One immediate word of warning–if you have small kids, ignore the suggestion you’ll find in many other park reviews to use the free parking outside the preserve. It’s a very long walk from that lot to the more interesting parts of Alum Rock.  I recommend paying the $6 day use fee for more convenient access.

Toddler Trekking

Once in the park, I suggest continuing to the Visitor Center along the Penitencia Creek Road.  This is off the road and a little hard to spot. Don’t stop at the first sign indicating the trail to the Visitor Center, it’s a long trail and you’re better off parking about a quarter of a mile up the road in the lot that’s actually by the center itself.  The area around the Visitor Center itself is fun to explore:  there are two nice playgrounds for preschoolers, one with giant animal shapes to climb.  We then suggest walking left (as you face the center) and checking out the Youth Science Institute (entrance fee $1 adults and 50 cents for kids).  This has a small but fun display about local flora and fauna. There are live snakes and spiders, a stuffed fox for stroking, and stuffed bobcats and mountain lions to show the kids.  The YSI also inherited a strange, but intriguing, Victorian Collection of stuffed birds and it’s nice to be able to show children all the hawks and owls that they might see while hiking locally.  I also liked their little curiosity table with bones and nests and preserved frogs that children are encouraged to explore and touch.  The YSI has an attached aviary which houses injured “local” birds which the rangers sometimes bring out to show visitors. When we were there we were lucky enough to see a Western Screech Owl outside the building with its ranger minder.  The kids, especially The Puppy Dog, thought this was pretty neat.

Owl, owl, owl!

To see the slightly surreal ruins of the health spa, continue along the path in the same direction.  It’s a fairly short trail, only a few hundred yards, and is perfect for little children to walk–just watch them near the creek edge.  Both out boys really enjoyed seeing the springs emerging from the rocks, touching the mineral deposits and climbing into the (now empty) old stone spas.  There are two or three bridges, depending how far you walk, and you can cross backwards and forwards across the creek to see the ruins on each side.  Midway round the ‘Mineral Springs Loop’ (as the extremely unhelpful park map calls it) you’ll come to the Sycamore Grove which is perfect for snack time.

Taking the waters

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »