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Some suggestions (although I’d check before you head out if the weather is bad – there may be cancellations):-

March 17th

Family Day at Elkus Ranch. See here for details. Registration required.

Wingding Family Fest at Skyline Ridge Open Space Preserve, 10am-3pm. It’s a bird themed celebration of spring.  Find the flyer here.  CANCELLED.

Enjoy a tour of Deer Hollow Farm in the Rancho San Antonio County Park, 10am-1pm, admission $5. The flyer is here.

Family Bird Walk at the Don Edwards Bay Wildlife Refuge, 2.30-4.30pm. Recommended for kids aged 5-10, reservations required.

I thought today was going to be one of those looooonng days where the kids are going crazy trapped inside by super heavy rain.  Especially after we had inside preschool in the morning. They are, after all, Outdoors Kids right?  But it actually proved to be a really fun afternoon.  The weather vaguely co-operated and we were able to get outside for a few hours.  I also discovered that rain days make perfect science days, which little boys really enjoy.

The boys are fascinated by rain.  They haven’t seen too much of it this year, so it’s novel, and it makes everything — in their opinion anyway — so much more interesting.  First, we decided to see how much rain was falling this week and whipped up a quick rain gauge. It wouldn’t win any prizes for beauty or scientific accuracy, but it did the job and was constructed entirely from items we found in our recycling bin.  The Monkey is fascinated with numbers and measuring things, so he loved explaining how the gauge would work and finding a good spot for it in the garden.  It better rain enough over night to make it satisfying to look at tomorrow.

Five pounds of rain Mom!

Then we went to our local park and noticed all the changes the rain had made in this familiar landscape.  We talked about why the wood chips and sand had changed colour and why some areas of the park had remained dry.  We talked about how and where puddles form. Then we pondered how different the creek might look after rain.  The Monkey, after his current favourite TV show, likes to make hypotheses (“Mommy, a hypothesis is an idea you can test!”), so I encouraged him to guess how the creek would have changed from our last visit.  He suggested it would have more water and be running faster.  We clambered down to the creek to check and he was delighted to discover he was right–the creek was running really high and fast.  We then spent a happy thirty minutes paddling in the creek as we had our rain boots on anyway.  Rain? It’s just an opportunity for science, right?

The boys were at a loose end in the garden for a while today.  They gathered up their ride-on cars, a bucket of water and brushes and set up a car wash.  I think it’s a great idea and, once the weather warms up, we may expand the car wash.

Nice and clean

Sharon Park

Last week we had a great hike at Sharon Park. This tranquil spot is a great toddler destination: there’s a grassy area for kids to run around, a great (but short) hike through the woods, a pond to explore, a little play structure for climbing and sliding, picnic tables and plentiful parking.

Looking for the fish

To do the hike, head left from the car park past the climbing frame and pick up the trail going into the wood. The trail veers round to the right and runs parallel to the pond through the woods.  This is a great area for kids to explore off trail and enjoy some unstructured play and fort building.  After a few hundred yards the trail re-emerges onto the grass at the far side of the pond and from there you can explore the path around the water.  There’s lots to see in the pond including insects, large koi and ducks.  Most toddlers really get a kick out of the big, colourful fish–mine could have watched them for hours.

These results of a recent survey of British kids are really super sad. Can’t imagine the situation in the US is much better.

TOP TEN THINGS (UK) CHILDREN AGED 5 TO 13 CAN DO:

1 Work a DVD player – 67 per cent

2 Log onto the internet – 58 per cent

3 Play computer games on games console (wii, Xbox or similar) – 50 per cent

4 Make a phone call – 46 per cent

5 Use a handheld games console (Nintendo DSi, PSP or similar) – 45 per cent

6 Use an iPhone (or smartphone) – 42 per cent

7 Work Sky Plus – 41 per cent

8 Send a text message – 38 per cent

9 Search for clips on YouTube – 37 per cent

10 Use an iPad (or tablet computer) – 31 per cent

TOP TEN THINGS UK CHILDREN AGED 5 TO 13 CAN’T DO:

1 Recognise three types of butterfly – 91 per cent

2 Repair a puncture – 87 per cent

3 Tie a reef knot – 83 per cent

4 Read a map – 81 per cent

5 Build a camp fire – 78 per cent / Put up a tent 78.5 per cent

6 Spot a blackbird, sparrow or robin – 71 per cent

7 Make papier mâché – 72 per cent

8 Make a cup of tea – 65 per cent

9 Build a den – 63 per cent

10 Climb a tree – 59 per cent

See here for the report.

Smelling overdrive

Since discovering that some plants smell interesting, The Monkey now wants to smell every garden we walk past.  This isn’t too bad, although it does slow down any strolls we take around the neighbourhood.  His brother, however, also wants to join in but doesn’t really have the skills–he tends to blow his nose onto plants rather than to sniff.  So now we’re the family who walk past people’s gardens, have two kids grabbing at flowers for a smell, and one who leaves a small trail of snot across every plant he stops by. Luckily our neighbours think it’s funny.

Let's have a sniff

 

We made it down to beautiful San Juan Bautista this weekend to check out the state park’s ‘living history’ day (first saturday of every month) and to explore the mission.  It’s a real gem and makes a wonderful family trip with plenty to keep adults and kids busy.

The mission

Mission with bells

The mission and the state park buildings both border the central plaza-a large grassy area perfect for running off toddler energy and enjoying a picnic.  The appearance of the plaza is pretty much as it was a hundred years ago, although it has a deceptively tranquil feel.  In the nineteenth century the plaza was an important stopping point on the original El Camino Real which ran north and south along the coast connecting the missions, and was bustling with activity, travellers and traders. Just six years after the mission was founded, well over 1,000 people lived there. More arrived during the gold rush and for many years it was one of the largest towns in California. The ‘living history’ day events try to capture some of this and to offer visitors a sense of the varied people who came through the town over the years. It’s a laudable effort although the mixed up period dresses all thrown in together is just the tiniest bit odd, and I think they could do more to show how important native americans were to the functioning of the town from its very earliest days.  There were mountain men, trappers and traders, civil war veterans and the occasional lady in Victorian attire wandering around.  The ‘actors’ are all super friendly and encouraged the kids to touch the furs and tents and antique rifles and were eager to share their stories.

Standing on the original El Camino Real

Making Mommy a bit nervous

To the right of the plaza are the buildings of the state historic park. There is the old Plaza Hotel, a Castro-Breen Adobe which now contains museum displays, a small settler cabin, stables and the Zanetta house. The boys really enjoyed checking out the stables which house numerous historic wagons and, which they thought was best of all, a late nineteenth-century fire wagon called the San Juan Eagle. They loved seeing how it used buckets to carry water rather than hoses. The Zanetta House is also worth a visit.  It was especially interesting for the little ones to see what a late nineteenth-century children’s playroom looked like and I enjoyed the heavy duty children’s play kitchen. Made all our plastic ones look rather insubstantial.

On the other side of the Plaza is the old mission.  It was founded in 1797 by the Franciscans. The church itself was built gradually between 1803 and 1817 and retains most of its original features.  It’s worth a poke around the mission gardens (the kids loved the bells and cacti) and a look into the church.  It always amazes me, coming from an English protestant background, just how colourful these old Spanish Catholic churches were.  The wooden panelling housing the saints behind the altar was especially interesting–it’s exactly what many English churches contained before the reformation and it really gives the building a different feel.  My other favourite thing about the church? It has a cat flap.

The San Juan Eagle, 1869-1909

Check out that play stove

We spent a happy few hours here and will definitely be returning.  There’s a small charge for each part of the plaza: $3 for the state park and $4 for the mission.

It was only as we prepared to leave that we finally realised why it all looked so familiar–it was the setting for the climax of Hitchcock’s Vertigo.

Sunset Beach

This glorious weekend we headed down to Sunset Beach in Santa Cruz, right next to our beloved Manresa SB.  It’s another beautiful stretch of sand. The boys had a great time paddling, building castles and collecting shells.  Do beware that the currents on this beach are pretty strong and you should keep a tight eye on wading preschoolers.  We also noted a lot of sand flies down there. Is that usual?

$10 day use fee. Toilets in the parking lots. BBQs to reserve.

Quail Hollow Ranch

I’d never heard of this little gem up in the Santa Cruz mountains near Felton until this weekend, but it sounded so intriguing that we had to check it out.  Quail Hollow Ranch is a 300 acre historic horse ranch and nature preserve boasting a plethora of rare Californian plants and animals and no less than 15 natural habitats.  According to the on site museum, it’s also where the owners of Sunset magazine enjoyed the robust, outdoorsy life that kept them young at heart.

No preserve is complete without a dirt pile

After visiting today, I’d say it’s also a great destination for little boys. It has everything they need: large animals (horses), ducks, woodpeckers, eagles, logs to climb on, mud to squelch near the pond, and a flat but varied trail system to run along and explore.  There was also a man in the car park wearing a snake (I think he’s there the first sunday afternoon of every month).

Quail Hollow's airy trails

Quail Hollow Ranch has a couple of trails but they’re all fairly short and easy for little ones to hike.  We, or rather The Monkey, selected the Discovery Trail for our hike. It was actually a useful introduction to the preserve as it took us around the ranch, a little way up the hill, through the valley and round to the duck pond and picnic area.   There are a couple of other trails we plan to check out on future visits.  The preserve also has a cute little museum with some interesting natural history exhibits.  As usual, we didn’t meet any other families when we were there, which was a shame as this is a great spot to take toddlers to let them roam free (no traffic, no glaring natural dangers etc). And it’s free.

neat trees.

Not sure it’s worth a day trip from Silicon Valley, but if you’re heading out that way it’s a great spot to check out.

A few ideas:

Celebrate hummingbirds at the Arboretum at the University of Santa Cruz.  See details here.  We’ve not been to this event, but the Autumn monarch butterflies festival was lots of fun.

Saturday 3rd March: there’s a three mile ‘tracks and scat’ hike at the Russian Ridge Preserve.  Information here.

For those who like a spot of history, this event at the San Juan Bautista State Historic Park might be worth checking out. We’re going to try and get down there at some point in the coming months.

This is a bit far out but meant to be spectacular: open weekend at the Black Diamond Mines Regional Preserve.  It’s on our ‘to do’ list.