Showing posts with label Li'l Ella. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Li'l Ella. Show all posts

Friday, 11 October 2013

Packages of Love ... Love of Packages ... from the States

We are so very lucky to have families in the good ol' US of A who send us packages every now and then full of presents for Beau and little things from the States that we can't always find in Kiwiland...  We got back to back packages this week from Georgia and Florida!

dadddddyyyy... when can we open it???
finally!
mmmmmmmm.... thanks mom!
will you share?  probably not!
new bigger boy sippy cups!
new summer duds!
Ella feeling the love too!
angry birds frisbee (not angry chooks) and halloween tug-o-war!
Unfortunately, this is the only picture I have of the nice jerky mom & dad sent to Lee...it went in his tummy immediately :)
oh boy!  oberto!

My mom always remembers how much I love licorice... black jelly beans at Easter ... this has to be the most traveled licorice in the world :)
from australia to fayetteville, ga to new zealand to my tummy!

Thank you so much for all the little thoughtful things in the packages... cards... pictures.... deodorant..... we love them all!!!





Sunday, 25 November 2012

Turkey Day in Kiwiland

Last week, Lee says "I will cook the turkey."  Kiwis don't really "do" turkeys until Christmas seeing as how they don't really have Thanksgiving.  Another complication is that it is spring/summer here so your typical Thanksgiving side dishes aren't always available - as in, no brussel sprouts... think strawberry season...  And!  no jellied cranberry sauce in the can.... thank goodness :)

All that being said, we found a 3.5 kilo turkey and made some quick substitutions on the fly for side dishes but kept the traditional sweet potato casserole, stuffing/dressing, and cranberry sauce.  Lee dry brined the turkey for a few days and did a secret under the skin spice rub that I'm pretty sure had some Szechuan peppercorns in it.

What is Thanksgiving without some good college football?  We waited until today to have turkey day so that we could watch the UF vs FSU game which came on at 9:00am here.  It's becoming a Sunday morning tradition for Lee and Beau to get up for ESPN Gameday and then the UF game every Sunday.


beau gators!
Our fellow ex-pat friend, Carlton, came over for the football and feast.  Unfortunately for him, he is (was) a FSU fan!  Great come behind win for the Gators today.  Even our GT Yellowjacket nephew (sorry for your loss Ty!) got behind the Gators!



Dinner was nice to have with friends here, but we miss our family and state-side friends!!  Hope more of you can come for a visit in the near future....

turkey day table

fellow ex-pat carlton

lee requested traditional sweet potato souffle - marshmallow and all....


perfectly juicy turkey
just a little snack for me!


Dessert - had to be pumpkin pie!  Homemade crust and everything.... brandy whipped cream on top.

yum-kin pie


Aftermath....
and then there is always these....

tryptophan doesn't seem to impact ella...








Sunday, 5 August 2012

Kiwi Family Weekend

We got out of the house quite a bit two weekends ago and decided to risk heading to Bethell's Beach with baby and boxer!  The weather was sunny and not bad for a NZ winter day - about 55F.  It had been raining most of the week and we (Ella & Kim) were getting cabin fever in a big way.

It is amazing the amount of prep work that goes into getting the whole family ready to go out - timing the feeding, changing, adults getting to shower... what used to take minutes has moved into the hours timeframe :)

We got to Bethell's about mid-day on Saturday and the sun was still out, but the wind was whipping the west coast beaches.  Lee strapped Beau into the Baby Bjorn (first test run) and we headed out all bundled up.
wearable baby
beau bjorn
Unfortunately, the wind was a bit much for Beau and Lee headed back to the truck for a light snack while Li'l Ella and I played frisbee on the beach....
lunchtime
li'l ella... wind in her hair :)
The adults needed to eat, so we went to Kohu Road Cafe for a quick bite.  This is a very cool cafe - reminiscent of Atlanta coffee shops.  They also do their own ice cream here - all natural and so amazing.  

kohu road cafe - yummy ice cream!
This was a big day out for the fam.  A bit of traveling, getting in and out at lots of stops, some exercise for everyone....  Came home and had some tummy time and lazed around for the afternoon.
tummy time - getting stronger

tummy time for ella too!

All in all a very successful day.  Lots of "firsts" and trials.  Things are going well here in New Zealand.   Different, but great!
beau's first shower
sleepy time




Tuesday, 10 July 2012

Beau Patrick Stewart

WARNING!: This post may contain material that is unsuitable for people who don't want a very personal view into what transpired during our boy's birth....


"A brand new baby was born yesterdayJust in timePapa cried, baby criedSaid your tears are like mine"
Woof.
On the evening of Wednesday, 27th of June, Kim and I went to the Auckland City Hospital to induce labor.  We had to do this because our birth was a "high risk" one and the doctors did not want us to go much beyond the due-date which was June 24.  Well, waters did not break by the 24th and we really didn't even have a whole lot of movement on the labor front.  The little man was still just kicking and squirming away inside mom's tummy.
When you induce labor in New Zealand it is pretty much a 3-step process:
  1. Prostaglandin jelly applied to the cervix.  This helps to soften the cervix and move you into waters breaking and proper labor.
  2. Manually break waters.  This is done crudely with a hook.
  3. Oxytocin drip.  This is a hormone drip which tricks the body into labor... it is the same hormone which is naturally released by a pregnant woman who goes into labor.
We did not want to go this route because we had heard induced labors are usually very long, more painful, and increase recover time.  But our time ran out.

4PM Wednesday, June 27th, in we go to the Birth Center at Auckland Hospital.  Our doc (Lynda) applies the jelly and slaps a monitor on Kim's belly which shows the baby's heart rate and contraction frequency reader... this was pretty cool.  Even before the jelly went on, we could see Kim's uterus having sporadic contractions.


last time "comfortable" for a while...
The jelly took about 2 hours to bring on some activity. It went on at 5PM and the contractions started at 7pm.  These were unlike any Kim has had before during the pregnancy and it took some concentration to get through them. Most of the labor was in her back - which is the most painful kind.  This went on for about 5 hours, and then, finally, they brought a pethidine shot and gave it right to the poor woman's thigh. This helped out a lot and allowed Kim to rest and for me to catch a few hours of shut-eye as well. Pethidine has a bad reputation with pregnancy these days but it is out of your system in about 5 hours...which they knew was going to be more than enough time before the proper labor was to start.

waiting.....
So pethidine shot Wednesday night.  A bit of rest, and then Thursday morning we had enough progress that they allowed us to move to the delivery suite down the hall. This was a much nicer room and we are supplied with a midwife to oversee our progress the entire time as well as the next doctor on call for the day, Gillian Gibson. Gillian manually broke our water at about 9AM. This brought on some more severe contractions which the midwives tried to help us get through but at no point offered the sweetness of the epidural.... a four-letter word for some around here.

Kim tried for the non-epidural route for about 4 hours.... she no likey.  I'll skip the details of this part of the nightmare, but if you ask Kim she will agree that it was the low point of the whole exercise.  We called for an epidural at around 1PM, the anesthesiologist did not show up until just after 2..... but ahhhhhhhh.  Once that bad-boy got kicking in we were in business. (slightly relieved Kim below)

oxytocin drip...waters broke...now the fun starts....
We also received the Oxytocin drip just before the epidural. This stuff kicks the pregnancy behaviors into overdrive.  Once the epidural was in full effect it became a waiting game. We were at about 2-3 cm when we got the epidural and we needed to get to 10 in order to get bubs out the "natural" way.

I fortified our boredom with endless episodes of Entourage whilst Kim rationed the epidural drip.  I was of the mind that she should bank 4 hits of the stuff for the end, but she had other plans.

The Doc came every 4 hours after this, up until about midnight. Each time we had progress but it wasn't moving along as fast as the Doc would have liked.  She kept hinting that we would have to wheel Kim into "Theater" (I ain't talkin Shakespeare, my man) but wouldn't/couldn't really tell us what was going to happen.  This pushed Kim to the breaking point and I have to admit that it was really frustrating after all this time and pain to think that we may be headed for a "Caesar".  But, we had another look at 1AM (Friday now) and we were almost there.  Doc said one more hour, check again, and it might be time to push.  An hour later she said it looked good and the midwife (Anna from Christchurch) gave Kim a few words of advice for pushing and pretty soon we would be off to the races.

At 2AM it was Me, the Midwife, and Kim starting the pushing.  Midwife said it should take about an hour's worth of pushing to get him out.  Kim had 2 hours since given up on the epidural as she wanted to be able to feel a bit more during the active pushing stage.

Now..... my wife isn't one of the "gossip-girl, lets-go-shopping, oh...i broke a nail" variety of dame....nossir. More like a "fall off a horse, concussion-oh-well, kettle-bell-tossin" flavour (epidural aside).  So now when it was time for her to become actively involved in this process and push..... she pushed HARD on every contraction and had the midwife hold up a mirror so that she could see the fruits of her efforts.  Midwife wanted 3 pushes per contraction.....well she could stow that, Kim would give her 4.  (Consequently I was given the job of holding one leg...so I changed status from utterly useless to foot-rest).  Doc came back in and was impressed with the progress. After about 30 min everyone agreed that bubs was coming out the old-fashioned way.... kind of.

Doc called for the stirrups and I was relieved of my leg-holding duties and basically told to move on out the way. We were at 1 hour of pushing and last I saw very close to full crowning. But as an the hour went by... and the doc pre-emptively applied the local anesthetic to an unmentionable area.... I could start to sense that we were in for some extra-curricular activities. This baby was estimated at 9.1 lbs.... a big boy and the doc knew it.  The midwife very calmly, and quietly, picked up a phone on the wall and I overheard something about "blah, blah, fetal distress".  Out of nowhere 3 more people were in the room... a lady with a ventouse machine, a guy with a bright orange resuscitation bag, and some other person who just seemed to want to see the show.

All of this went down so quickly that it could have been unnoticed..... but I noticed. I've never felt, in a matter of seconds, a wave a panic and helplessness where it seemed like everything you love in the world could be snatched away right in front of you. That's what those seconds felt like and the midwife must have noticed because she asked if I wanted to sit down.

So then, episiotomy... blood... baby's head got out... attached the ventouse machine... but you could stow that too because Kim pushed the rest of him out on the next contraction.  35.5 hours from when we were admitted to the hospital to baby in arms....

Big boy.  Purple.  Full head of hair.  Right onto Kim's chest gurgling with all attitude we knew he had from his 9 months inside.

Beau Patrick Stewart. 56.5cm long.  4.115kgs.  Where the heck did she keep it all???




Big boy.  Purple.  Full head of hair.  Right onto Kim's chest gurgling with all attitude we knew he had from his 9 months inside.

4.115....like I said....a bruiser


4 more hours to allow the epidural to wear off and verify that Kim could walk and we were off to Birth Care.  Birth Care is a neat benefit of being a resident of New Zealand. It is like a hotel which is loaded with midwives who help mom out in her first tough, few days.  We opted for a partner suite where I could stay as well.  The help was great.  All meals and cleaning is sorted out so it makes it really easy on you.  The only negative is that they are hell-bent on breast feeding.  Which is fine, but we weren't getting a ton of milk to little Beau.  Rather than suggest we supplement with formula, they said nothing. As a result Beau lost 0.5 kgs of weight... over 10% of his birth weight.. much more of a weight loss than is acceptable.  We didn't find this out until we got home and our local midwife (Cathy) came by to weigh him.
Mom and Beau at Birth Care
We stayed at Birth Care from early Friday morning through to Monday morning whereupon I FINALLY got to use the new truck for its intended purpose:

the truck is correct.
 Now lets get this baby home safe. Pre-flight check.  Go!:

  1. Baby - Check
  2. Wifey - Check
  3. Travel music - Check
  4. Adjust Range Rover to appropriate suspension height - Check
  5. Watch fuel gauge move counter-clockwise the whole way home - Check
  6. Heated seat for navigator (me) - Check


proud Daddy driving new family truckster
One more event before we can settle in back home though.  Got to hope that Li'l Ella doesn't go ballistic and tear off one of Beau's arms when he gets home.  Not to worry though.... the great Lyn Ekdahl provided me with some literature on the proper way to introduce a new pack member to a previously single-child-spoiled doggy.  Once I figured out that Ella is probably slower in more than one way as a greyhound, the information made sense (www.greyhoundsaspets.org.nz).



As expected the introduction went smoothly.  To date, Beau is just another strange smell for Ella that she wants to lick. 
can I eat him now?


The week we got home we actually made several trips out of the house with Beau, and sometimes Ella, for various reasons including running back to hospital for a checkup on Kim, getting Beau's tongue and upper lip laser'd (he was tongue-tied like Kim as a baby), going to dinner at a friend's house, and last but not least, Beau's first trip to a west coast (best coast) beach. This time we went to Piha.... never been before:

new world order.... finally got Ella off the seats and in the boot!

Beau and Kim on Piha Beach

Lion rock at Piha
So far so good. We are figuring out this parenting thing one day at a time and have been overwhelmed with the amount of support and kindness from neighbors, friends, and co-workers. The health care here has been amazing... it is almost like they WANT you to have babies and actually care about the well-being of mom and baby from the start to the end of the process.  The government here paid for most of the Birth Care stay, a lactation consultant, and weekly visits from our local midwife to make sure everything is going ok.  They aren't just trying to gouge us or our insurance for as many dollars as they can.... weird... and refreshing....

As a final example, a very nice woman I work with (Monique Judd!!!) , but do not even know that well, went ahead and knitted Beau a pair of booties.... I mean.... how do you repay that level of un-solicited kindness?

new kicks!



Additional pics of the li'l guy..:
this is Lee after a night out with the blokes....

Beau and Dad having a snooze at birth care

Bugga-Beau
cute....for now...
5 min after birth. He is a whopper jr
Beau, Kim, and Lee's belly






Monday, 21 May 2012

Posh Pooch?

So for all you folks in the Northern Hemisphere who are enjoying the spring time weather, fresh may flowers and all that pollen, us kiwis down here in the Southern Hemisphere are gearing up for winter - such that it is.



This is our first winter in NZ and so far it is not all that bad. A LOT more rain - think Seattle - and the temps are a bit more chilly - upper 40s at night and lower 60s during the day.  It is truly amazing how the kiwis don't let any weather change modify their daily outdoor activities and routines.  Every morning we still see the same runners training - rain or shine.  It can be a downpour outside with 20mph winds and moms are still outside pushing their prams with rain covers and walking their dogs.  We must adjust...

Li'l Ella being the very pampered inside pooch that she is, has not really taken to the cooler temps and rainy days.  ESPECIALLY when Lee makes her ride in the bikini top jeep after a swim in the chilly Tasman Sea.... what to do?

We made a trip to Animates (kiwi Petsmart) to investigate how the Kiwis outfit their dogs for the drizzly winter and you would be amazed at the choices and the fact that dogs actually do get raincoats and winter warmers here - it's not just for chihuahuas anymore!  We hesitantly invested in two items for Li'l Ella:

     1.    ThunderShirt - think UnderArmour
thundershirt!
i think i like it.... i think i like it...


     2.     DrizaBone Jacket - think Australian Oilskin

drizabone - more my style!

room to pee... i mean breathe!


Saturday - rain or shine - we made plans to go for a tramp to get out of the house and a bit of exercise for the whole family.  The weather was a bit chilly in the upper 50s and drizzling rain.  Lee tried to pick a somewhat less aggressive trail for his 35-week preggo wife and we ended up selecting the Huia Dam Walk.   The description said that most of the hike is on a dirt road and most of it is pram/stroller accessible, so pretty easy, right?

huia dam track
The track can take you to two amazing dams and the water reservoirs created by the dams.  If you choose to do the entire track it is 6km one-way.  We were thinking, maybe just a short walk since it was  rainy and just see what the Lower Huia Dam had to offer.  

We suited up - all three of us!  Lee and I in multi-layers covered with our Kathmandu jackets and Li'l Ella with her DrizaBone coat.

The Lower Dam is pretty amazing.  It's just a short (uphill) walk from the carpark.  It was completed in 1929 and is one of the most crucial water supply areas for Auckland.  The dam has a grassy front for grazing animals instead of a typical concrete wall.  The water overflow pictured below is a pretty breathtaking concrete funnel that looks like something from a 007 movie!

lower huia dam with water overflow cyclone


It was just a bit misty so we decided to go ahead and hike a bit further.  Then I see a sign for a tunnel - uh oh, we MUST hike to the tunnel!  Of course there is no indication exactly how far this tunnel is... but we set off in good spirits enjoying the time outside and peacefulness of the day.

suspension bridge over the stream
nice peaceful track

The only part of the track that is really suitable for prams/strollers is the lower dam area.  Although it is a one-lane, gravel road most of the way, we encountered some pretty steep hills and rocky areas.  Getting the extra 15 pounds of baby I'm carrying around up the hills required a few stops for doubled over catch my breath time!

The tunnel is right before the Upper Huia Dam - about 1.5 hours into the hike...  I just had to see it right?  Definitely worth it.  The tunnel is about 65m long and carved into the mountain.  It was really beautiful and worth the trek to get there.

entrance to tunnel

look at my belly!
The Upper Huia Dam is a more typical exposed concrete dam - amazing in its remoteness that man completed this engineering structure in the 1929!

upper huia dam
Three hours and 12km later, we returned to the car park.  All three of us were warm AND dry although a little knackered after the tramp.  Li'l Ella's posh pooch poncho kept her nice and warm... Success!