Friday 16 January 2009

Random Photos and Update

Elijah's got his first tooth - the lower right incisor. He's been pretty chill throughought the whole thing, but the poor little guy has been suffering from acid reflux (heartburn, basically). Until we figured it out (and bought him the right medicine) he was getting up every 2 hours or so at night being miserable.

He's still got problems, but he slept 12 hours for the first time ever a few days ago, and has only been waking up once or twice most nights, which is a major improvement over 4+ times. Still, his weight gain is a little slow because he's been upchucking so much, so we're keeping an eye on the situation.

Here's a few random pictures I found on the laptop....



Bruno on McClure's Beach near Pt. Reyes, California in 2007. We never meant to go to this beach. We were just out for a nice country drive and wound up at the hike to the beach and figured we'd go for a walk. This beach is at one of the northernmost points of the area and so was pretty wild and windswept (and cold!).



On the same trip, we hiked out to the beach at the end of Tennessee Valley trail with a picnic of bread, cheese and salami. Once we got to the beach we found that the waves were really ginormous, probably 4+ feet average, but with some "sleeper" waves that were bigger. The beach had a lowlying part that was flooded with brackish water running into a nearby lagoon, but we went ahead and crossed it (the water deterred a lot of the regular hikers). Once we did, we found a safeish place to watch the waves... but the wave-watching soon turned into people-watching.

A lot of the random folks weren't paying a lot of respect to the ocean and were walking right up to the surf. It was all right for about 80% of the waves, but the sleepers would sneak up pretty quickly, and the people would find themselves scurrying hastily to higher sand in order to escape the surf, which came in hard, fast, and deep, carrying a layer of sea foam on its crest.

Soon, more and more people were people-watching, and there was a slight tinge of excitement every time a new person or couple would approach. Everyone would quit watching the ocean and surreptitiously watch the new folks walk blithely down the dune toward the water. Often, when the surf chased them, they had to turn tail and run instead of simply getting away with dancing backward. Otherwise, they'd be drenched with a mile+ hike back to civilization and dry clothes.

Anyhow, that's all for now.

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