A late-afternoon walk out the East Pier (across the road from our place)
This is my book-club, over Skype, with my sisters. Well, we spent the first 10 minutes last week discussing Sarah's eyebrows (which turned into a discussion of all of our eyebrows, naturally).
This was Norah's coloring-job last week. After school, she loves to color by herself on the carpet in the middle of our living room. She sits there and sings or hums to herself the entire time - only interrupting herself to say, "Nearly finished! Don't come over here yet! I'll bring it to your face, to show you, when I'm done". "Ok, Norah...I won't peek" (which is a wonderful hour for me because I can get things done in the kitchen and start dinner and all that good stuff).

So I knew she was working on this puzzle as she kept stopping to count the number of pieces she had left. I expected to come over and see sort of "abstract art", filling each and every square. Well, after a full hour, I was summoned by the artist and this is what she showed me. You should have heard my mom-squeal! "Nooorrraahhh! You did THIS?! It's ammmmmmmmaaaaazzzing!" - as she stood there just beaming, chest all puffed out with a big smile on her face. I was ridiculously proud of this little girl and it made me realize she's turned another big developmental milestone. Sometimes she seems the 3 she is, and sometimes she seems like a 9 year old.
A cool building in the city centre here in Dublin. This is about the 1913 Lockout and Union Rights'.
Last week I was asked to go to a running event put on by a friend who works in a running shop in the city Centre. Well, the leaders of some of the running clubs were asked to come up, where we were given free Brooks running pants, free Brooks coats, and free running socks, all to promote safety for night running. It was so fun! This was the group of us. We did a little 4 1/2 mile route around the city Centre and stopped in a few places for advertising shots for Brooks. (small price to pay!)

I finally, finally, got my copy of "The Hero with a Thousand faces" from our library. This is our book-club text, with my sisters. I've been on a waiting list for 6 weeks!! (In the meantime I have tried 8 bookstores in Dublin, all to no avail.) It finally arrived though and while Norah and I were on the way to the park (after school), she fell asleep so I ducked into a café and read for half an hour! It was bliss. For the 6 weeks since it arrived, I've been reading an online PDF of the book, on the iPad (not my preferred way to read a book).
Look at this little lady!
This was on Wayne's last day of teaching for the semester and he asked me to take his picture, to show how "thin and stressed" he looked. He wants me to take the exact photo in about 6 weeks to see if he changes. :)
I feel like I get a glimpse of what Norah will look like as an older girl, here.
Seeing our friends finish a grueling mountain race - a 25Km slog through the Wicklow Mountains (all say this was much harder than a full marathon).
Only in Dublin would they run out of 'cars' on the merry-go-round and then decide to WELD on, two little kid bikes, as a replacement. I can't quite show in the photo, how destitute this looked.
Saturday afternoon (after our jaunt into the mountains and out to Kilruddery Estate) we happened to arrive back in Dun Laoghaire for the official arrival of Santa Clause. The center of D.L. is outside our apartment building (literally) so the Christmas stalls are all set up, rides galore, and they even had choirs singing and fireworks for the occasion. Dun Laoghaire is becoming a pretty big deal!
Santa in his weird, house-car. Behind him, that glowing ride is one of those very, very tall slides (that you'd use a burlap sack on) except its an ice slide and you sit on an innertube. We'll see..
On Sunday we decided to take full advantage of still having the rental car and drove up to Killiney Hill park - Norah's favorite playground.
Drive in to Powerscourt Estate, County Wicklow
With the rental car this weekend, we decided to make the trek down to Powerscourt Estate (25 minutes from us). They had a free event where you could go into the stables and visit all the "Christmas animals". (pretty sure the "reindeer" are just deer, for example)
Pygmy goats
(You'll see my explanation on the next post but I had been inside Avoca and came out to look for them.) I walked about a block away from the Powerscourt Estate mansion to see all these people kicking the leaves and jumping in them. Well, then I see Wayne and Norah and he tells me that they started this whole thing by making a pile and suddenly there were hoards of people joining in.
You can barely see Wayne buried there!
Scheming...."Hm...4 foot pile of leaves we just made....what can we do??"
Why is Norah, all the sudden, behind that tree trunk?! (you can just see her teal coat peeking out, to the right of Wayne's bent knee)
Love the big smile on Norah's face
Haiii-YAW!
Swim, Norah, swim!
Wayne asked Norah to hold his glasses while he did his leaf-diving and we turn around to see this.
Professor Dykstra
This father and son looked like they were directly out of 1940s Ireland
Norah turned into an orb of light here but this was one of the 'funnest' (that's not a word but it's the description I want to use!) thing we have ever done together.
Driving back toward hiome, down into the village of Enniskerry. This is less than 25 minutes from our place. It'd be the equivalent of driving from Seattle to Issaquah, I suppose.
On weekends when have the car for 2 days, we never want to go home. So instead of heading straight home after Powerscourt Estate, we drove the real roundabout way, through Dublin city. (oddly enough, that teal building on the right - KC Peaches - is owned by a Seattle-native, living here in Dublin. There are 3 or 4 locations now in the city and they're very popular)
Norah fell asleep on the way home so we stopped at Sandymount. Wayne walked wayyyy out (he's there in the middle) while I read in the car for a bit. On the far right is the West Pier in Dun Laoghaire, near our place.
It was a purely magical weekend!!