Dear Friends and Family,
Autumn is a beautiful time of year in Colorado. It's like the world
purposefully starts to slow down and get into the festive spirit. The leaves
begin to change colour, the wind whistles as it blows, snow suddenly appears
out of nowhere and frozen turkeys appear in every supermarket. It is also the
start of football season when Colorado starts eat, drinking and bleeding Denver
Broncos blue and orange -it's a special time of year.
This year we repeated our visit to the corn maze. 4 families adventured into
the agricultural eastern plains of Colorado, in search of this year’s maze - a
giant pictograph of the local quarter back, Payton Manning (demi-god to any NFL
fan). The drought had a big impact on the maze this year; the stalks were only
6-7 feet tall (in fact you could often see over them) and they were
considerably thinner than last year, but we had so much fun because Zac was
with us.
We played in the corn pit (not sand pit), jumped on a giant pillow, shot
pumpkins out of a huge air rifle, caught a 'train' around the field, slid down
an enormous slide on the side of a hill, and of course raced through the maze.
What is so great about this place is that everything has obviously been made of
farm left overs. The train carriages were 44 gallon drums cut in half
with a 'bench' and rope seat belts, the slide was obviously a mound of dirt
left over from digging a basement, covered in a tarp with carpet cut offs to
help you slide down, and all the veggies loaded into the air gun were those
that would have never made it to the supermarket shelves. It really had that
backyard/ farm yard/ neighbour’s yard feel to it - despite thousands of people
running around. There were several school aged kids and two babies with us, so
we got to have a lot of childlike fun. It was a beautiful sun kissed day full
of wonderful family memories.
A week or so later and it was Zac's first Halloween. Daddy and I spent a
couple of afternoons searching for the perfect costume... well one that fit
anyway. As no one was hosting a party this year, we went to one of the other
Aussie family's house so we could watch their kids go nuts. And they did! Our
little Superman fell asleep before any of the frivolity even started, while the
other Aussie kids collected buckets (no kidding!) of 'candy' from their
neighbours while dressed up in some gruesome costumes! It was a true American
experience to see hundreds of little monsters, ballerinas, zombies, football
players, zoo animals and cartoon character running around the streets with
pumpkin buckets in hand yelling 'trick or treat', with protective parents
waiting patiently in the driveway reminding everyone of their manners. It's
something I am very glad that we did.
Thanksgiving followed a few weeks later. Again the Apperley's hosted the
event. A couple of families and a few boys from Tristan's work came over for
the grand turkey feast. Tristan worked this year, so I was responsible for the
turkey. I put it in the oven way to early and it was ready 3 hours
before the meal - but it still tasted juicy and tender so it wasn't too bad. We
just have a big roast dinner basically, which isn't the way that Americans
actually do it, but we object to having boiled veggies with roast meat - that's
just dumb! It confuses any locals at the meal, but since we also insist on
generous amount of beer and wine, people get over it pretty fast.
That night I adventured out to the Black Friday sales. They are similar in
nature to Boxing day sales, but every store participates and people go bananas
for them. They camp out in front of their favourite stores, they turn up hours
and hours early to place a hand on that one product they can't live without,
and elbow everyone out of the way to get what they want. I just went as a
spectator to this sport, but grabbed 3 or 4 toys for Zac. Turns out that I was
able to get his Christmas presents and a couple of other older gifts for him
for dirt cheap. It was a successful evening. Tristan woke up at stupid o'clock
the next morning sales to do his shopping. As such, there is a state of the art
home cinema upstairs, more Lego for 'Zac' and some tools laying around. An
expensive, but bargain filled couple of hours.
And most importantly this Autumn saw us celebrate Zac's first birthday.
Somehow we had survived the first year of Zac's adventure. Go team Mama and
Dad! We shared the day with another little boy we know who is a week older than
our little man. Both Mum's spent many days (ok - weeks) preparing for the day.
There were about 20 people who were kind enough to come along to the first
birthday parties. Zac happily sat on everyone's knee, ate too much (well sort
of) and vomited in front of everyone. It was a good day. There were balloons,
cakes (thanks Aunty Beck) and good company. It was a good reminder of the
little community that we have built around us for support - we are very
lucky.
So it was a fun filled 'Fall' in 2012 - lots of laughter, smiles and good
times were had as the seasons moved steadily towards Winter. Only one
more until we are home.
Sending you all lots of love
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