Monday, April 29, 2013

Keepsakes: Explosion Boxes.

I just thought I'd share some pics of my first attempt at making explosion boxes. Back at Christmas I made each of my parents one and J one as well. They turned out to be nice little keepsakes
of Babe's first year. 







I also made these adorable little sewing kits for all the women in my family. Each recycled baby food jar has needles, thread, a thimble, a measuring tape, pins, little fabric patches and some buttons. To make them extra special I turned the lid into a pin cushion and put a personalized label on each one. They are the perfect size for traveling or keeping at an office, summer cabin or in a guest room.



Inside each box is photos from Babe's first year as well as her ultrasound image, footprint and little embellishments.






Friday, April 26, 2013

Review: Extreme Air Park.

Sorry the photos suck today. I wasn't thinking blog post when we headed out
 and it wasn't until we got there that I realized I should've brought my camera. 


Today Rachael and I decided to take Babe to the Extreme Air Park in Richmond. I only just heard about it a couple weeks ago. I did add it in as an update to my Lesser-Known Rainy Day Vancouver Activities post, but most of you wouldn't have noticed it tacked on there. So here is a quick review of the place.

It's pretty awesome although be prepared; it's expensive for a kids activity. It's $14.00 per hour of jumping, $19.00 per hour and a half or $21.00 for two hours. But on weekdays from 10am to 3pm it's $12.00 for an hour and a half, which makes it a little more reasonable. And trust me, if you're planning on bouncing too an hour and a half is plenty. I almost had a heart attack.

Also on the first trip you have to buy special socks to wear inside at $3.00 a pair. After that if you remember to bring them back then you don't have to buy more. I was a little annoyed that not only are toddlers the same price as adults you also have to pay for a pair of adult sized socks for them despite the fact that they would NEVER fit a toddler and baby/toddler socks usually have their own grips on the soles. So I had to pay for an extra pair of socks that Babe of course couldn't wear, which was ridiculous. Luckily Rachael had the sense to trade the extra pair of socks for a locker rental for us so it worked out. I don't know if the having to buy big socks for tiny tots is an actual policy or if the useless kid behind the counter just didn't want to bother with a three dollar refund. If I had judged the place just based on the front counter experience I would have left. But the place is pretty new so maybe they are still working out the kinks.

Once you're inside, Extreme Air Park is pretty sweet and it was worth the money. It's basically wall to wall trampolines. Actually, the walls are lined with trampolines too!  And the only area that you can fall off the trampoline is into an enormous foam pit.

Babe loved running on the trampoline half pipe.
Didn't like waiting her turn very much though.
It's got trampolines of all different sizes, trampoline dodgeball courts and trampoline basketball stations. They offer aerobics classes, special group rates and birthday parties. The website says that they will soon offer parent and child jump sessions so maybe that would be a more affordable time to take a little jumper.

I was mildly concerned that Babe, who is not 18 months old yet would get clobbered by bigger kids who are literally bouncing off the walls in there. So we went at a time when we thought it wouldn't be busy. It was still busy. Don't kids go to school anymore? Maybe it was let-your-home-schooled-kids-bounce day.

However most of the tramps are all sectioned off into personal sizes and even with the large ones, you can only have one jumper per tramp at a time. So unless kids get too rowdy and forget the rules there seemed to be little risk to the tiny jumpers. If it was a very busy day I could see it getting out of hand a little so that's another reason to keep an eye out for the promised parent and child times. But I saw lots of parents with a tiny kid happily bouncing and an older kid careening through the warehouse-sized facility like the Tasmanian Devil.

If you are a very nervous mommy you might have an anxiety attack with all the big kids flying around, but I personally felt that Babe was pretty safe. No one ever crashed into her -- unlike a bouncy castle which is essentially like throwing ten kids into a giant dryer and letting them tumble on air dry for an hour.

Rachael and Babe.
Babe was perfectly safe and she had a BLAST! So did Rachael and I, and bonus; it was an amazing workout! It was so much fun and such great exercise that I'm really tempted to try their Aerobics (AIRobics) class and I'd love to get a team together to go and play trampoline dodgeball.


My recommendation:
If you are looking for an activity that your older kids and younger ones can both enjoy doing this place is a definite win. If you only have a toddler maybe wait to see what their parent and child deal is. Or try it out on a weekday morning when it's cheapest and likely the least busy (although don't expect a ghost town). I'll for sure take Babe back because it was fun for both of us and I didn't have to worry about her falling which was more relaxing for me than taking her to the playground where she is now climbing all over the big-kid equipment.


Bonus: If you don't want to bounce (WTF?) there is an adult-only lounge with Wi-Fi.
Downer: No baby change table, I had to take Babe outside and change her on the endgate of the truck. But that's not a first.



Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Jump Gymnastics.







So my good friend Rachael was a gymnastics instructor for years. And since Babe was born she has been a great "auntie" and always very encouraging of Babe's physical development.

One of the first times that Babe stood alone while holding onto a stool was with Rachael. Rachael helped Babe practice her first steps in the early days of walking and recently she taught Babe how to do a somersault (front roll).

So of course it was Rachael who, wanting to share her love of gymnastics, took Babe and I to a drop-in class at Jump Gymnastics in Yaletown, Vancouver.


Rachael helping Babe do a front roll.


The place is pretty cool. It's a full-on gymnastics gym with pint-sized equipment. There's fun trampolines, bars, rings, balance beams and foam everything. Babe of course loves it, although she may not be the Olympic hopeful that Rachael wants her to be and she certainly doesn't like to perform on command.

Owner/director Jennifer Hood was a gymnastics coach for over twenty years and has an education degree. After her middle child was diagnosed with Cystic Fibrosis she realized that her nine to five job wasn't going to fit her family's needs. "I'd get phone calls on Thursday for her to be admitted for two weeks on Monday morning and what kind of an employer is ever going to go for that arrangement?" said Hood.

So she quit her job and built Jump.

"It was born because I really believe in what developmental gymnastics can bring to kids for the lifetime of being elite athletes or just generally participating in sport and the foundation that we can create for them."

Hood said that despite originally planning on opening Jump in East Vancouver the Yaletown location has been a blessing in disguise. "It's been a great location that has been filled with incredibly supportive and engaged parents."

All of Jump's coaches have a degree in a related field such as education or kinesiology and a sports background. Hood bragged that one coach is a Canadian women's wrestling champion and others have been dancers, soccer players and swimmers. "We've had almost every sport represented over the last five years," said Hood.

Hood's experience and training has told her that the early age of Jump students is the perfect starting point for learning important physical skills. She said studies show that between the ages of zero and six is when kids learn language and number skills, but it is also the time when children learn physical literacy.

"That idea that there is a discrete set of movement pathways, whether it be; skipping, running, climbing, jumping, rolling. There's a whole bunch of them. If kids are taught those and allowed to explore them in an environment that is liberating and excites them...they acquire what's called physical literacy."

When kids later combine those fundamental movement skills with sports skills, "they can go on to explore any sport that interests them," said Hood.

Hood knows that only about one per cent of children enrolled in gymnastics will go on to be an elite athlete in the sport but she says there is so much more that the training and equipment can provide.

The equipment at jump is the real stuff that you would see in a gymnastics centre - just smaller. "It provides them with an interesting playground to work on those movement skills," said Hood.

Kids can jump, climb, balance and hang. Hood said she really enjoys that with the smaller equipment she never has to say, "'Don't touch that. That's too dangerous. Don't go near that."

Babe, of course, was an instant Jump fan. She immediately preferred the trampolines, the ball pit and the balance beams, but being a good sport she tried it all.

She's 17 months old now and just starting to really climb and explore the playground equipment. To help keep her busy on indoor days I scoured the city and finally found a toddler-sized slide for her bedroom. The first night she had it she must've gone up and down that thing 30 times.

Then it was bedtime and she passed out cold.

On the way home from a Jump drop-in class.

For more information on Jump's classes and drop in times visit the www.jumpgymnastics.ca




Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Amazing Art Project Showcases Gender-Coloured Toys.


Check out artist JeongMee Yoon's "The Pink and Blue Project" here.



I found this really interesting. When I was pregnant I made such an effort to avoid buying "girl-coloured" clothing that I realized later that my baby daughter had more boyish clothing than girly clothing.

Now, I don't try so hard. I buy what I think is cute. But I do try to avoid amassing a ton of pink and purple crap and so far I am desperately avoiding commercial stuff - such as Disney Princess everything.

I know that as Babe gets older she is going to have her own preferences and I fear they may lean towards the sparkly and pastel. But if that's the case I'll remind myself that it's just a faze and I'll suck it up.

My Mom was so wary of commercial brand toys that I rarely got anything I really wanted. It wasn't that I wasn't spoiled. I was. But I didn't have Barbies and Cabbage Patch Dolls, she wanted to avoid buying toys like that, which were so heavily marketed towards children regardless of their actual educational or entertainment value.

Now I totally get why she did it, but at the time I was dying to have the same things my friends had. And she must've told my friend's parents about her beliefs because while the other kids got hoards of My Little Ponies at their birthday parties, I always got art kits. I would think my birthday party would be my only opportunity to get a "commercial toy" because surely my friends would get me one...but it never happened. But now I'm glad I was different.

Speaking of hoarding toys, I don't know if this was the artist's intention at all, but equally as interesting as the colour of the toys is the sheer amount of them. It's pretty gross to see the excess of possessions a child has. And my kid is no better.

Her next series should be comparing the treasures of one Western child with those of a third world child.


Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Lesser-Known Rainy Day Activities in Vancouver.



"April showers bring May flowers." 

Yes, it's true, spring is finally here, but it's still raining a lot. It'll warm up soon enough but if you're like me, you (and your kids) must be getting pretty antsy for the warmer wether by now. Especially after the taste we got last weekend.

However we likely still have a few weeks of rain left before our days of sunshine begin. So in case you've used up all your aquarium and Telus World of Science passes and you don't know what to do in these last rainy days, here are a few lesser-known kid-friendly indoor activities in Vancouver.


6Pack Beach back in October.


6Pack Indoor Beach
115-13180 Mitchell Road
Richmond
Kids: $7.00

Miss the beach? Me too. But did you know we have an indoor beach located inside a warehouse under the Knight Street Bridge? I didn’t know either.

Its main purpose is to provide beach volleyballers with somewhere to play in the off-season but it doubles as the Grand Poobah of sandboxes for kids. You won’t find any waves, seashells or hot dog vendors at 6Pack Beach. But you also won’t find any cigarette butts, cherry pits, broken glass or seagull poop either. So you won’t have to comb through your spot like a cat in a litter box for five minutes before you put the baby down. It’s a perfectly safe place for the little ones to put their beach toys to good use year round. There are lawn chairs for parents or bring some friends and play a game of volleyball or badminton while the kids make a sandcastle!


Urban Source
3126 Main Street
Vancouver
$6.50-$20.00 per bag

If the kids like crafts there is no place in town quite like the Urban Source. Imagine if you could fill a whole store with the items from your junk drawer. The place is awesome for anyone creative.

Essentially it’s an art supply shop and it does have a selection of paper, foil, stickers etc. But what it’s really known for is its eclectic collection of odds and ends. Half the store contains barrels filled with anything from old photographs and puzzle pieces to tiles and test tubes.

This is exactly the weird stuff that inspires kids. Not only is Urban Source fun, it’s a great recycling lesson too. Most of their inventory is scraps from local businesses that are being resold here instead of thrown in the trash.


The Crystal Ark
1496 Cartwright Street
Granville Island
$3.00-$10.00 per bag

The Crystal Ark is a fun side trip when you’re visiting Granville Island. Located behind the Kids Market (which is a blast all on its own) the Ark is a gemstone store.

That doesn’t sound like fun for the kids you say? Wait for it...

Attached to the shop is a dome with a pit of polished stones. Kids can take off their shoes and sift through the gems in the cave while you shop. And for a few bucks you can buy a (very small) baggie and the kids can take their favorite stones home.

Remember all those times your kid has found a pebble at the park and given it to you with as much enthusiasm as if it were a gold nugget? Well at least when they give you a rock from here for Mother's Day it'll actually be pretty.

They used to have a cool little cave at the back of the store that housed the rock pit. I preferred that to the new dome they built, which is a little damp and chilly in the winter - but kids probably won't care



The Bloedel Conservatory
Queen Elizabeth Park
Vancouver
Adults: $6.50, Child: $3.25, Preschoolers: Free, Family: $15.00

A lot of parents don’t know of, or have forgotten about this rainy day haven. Perched atop Queen Elizabeth Park the conservatory is a year-round tropical oasis and the perfect place for little ones to go on an adventure. Because ankle-biters won’t stop to smell the flowers it takes them only a few minutes to make a full lap around the dome. But they can stay for as long as they want. It’s warm, it’s dry and best of all it looks just like a jungle! Complete with tropical birds and koi fish.


UPDATE!!


Extreme Air Park
14380 Triangle Road
Richmond
$14.00 per hour

This article (HERE) just came out today in the Richmond Review newspaper. I wasn't aware of the Extreme Air Park before and I have never taken Babe there, but I bet it would be tons of fun for toddlers and older kids. Comment below if you've been and let us know what you thought.










Monday, April 8, 2013

Babe's First Easter Egg Hunt.

I'm just posting a few photos from Babe's first Easter egg hunt last weekend. I know I haven't been posting much lately but I have been interning full time for a local newspaper and trying to fit in workouts in the evenings. My internship ends soon so hopefully I'll have more time to post.

On the hunt with Grandpa.


Yes, that is a Barrel as Monkeys. Hey, it looks kinda like an Easter egg.
And also, yes, in my family we hunt for Easter eggs around the forklift.


Checking out her stash of eggs.


Eeeeegggggssss! 


So independent. 


Who's in there?


Look!


Looking for the surprise.


She's grown up so much since this time last year when she looked like this:


Easter 2012.