Within minutes of our arrival, Larkin had her face painted like a rainbow cat. The kids played with elaborate dress-up costumes, a huge game of tag, made corn husk and clothespin dolls, pipe cleaner madness, henna tattoos, two different storytelling circles, a playdough extravaganza, bottle cap art, and probably lots of other organized activities I've forgotten. Plus all the free play that inevitably happens when you have hundreds of kids gathered together in one big space.
In case anyone is planning to attend one of these with small children, I have three pieces of advice:
- Get sticker name tags for young children with their name, room number and your cell phone number. The official conference identification was on a rather flimsy and large necklace. Both kids took advantage of this on several occasions: "Please read my back and help me find my parents!"
- If you don't both have cell phones, invest in walkie talkies so you can find each other in the madness (we'll do this before our next conference).
- Get a hot plate for the hotel room so you don't have to rely on microwave dining and overpriced, mediocre hotel restaurant food.
One of the biggest hits of the weekend? The elevator. Both kids learned which buttons to press and several times left the room announcing they were going to play on the elevator. Usually they found their way back. Someday we'll have to take them to a building with more than three floors.
During almost every trip out into the world, Larkin makes a special friend. Even if we're making a quick trip to the library or park, she will seek out some particular individual to play with-- usually an older girl. Okay, pretty much always an older girl. This trip's subject of much (mutual) admiration was one Owen, probably 8-10 years old (I'm terrible at guessing ages). I admit that his long hair caused some initial gender confusion on Larkin's part which may explain her willingness to accept him as playmate, but there was no turning back once the issue was cleared up. They spent a solid three hours one night imagining threats to their kingdom and creating elaborate defense plans to protect each other. Owen had a sword. Larkin had a crown. Those are the only props I remember. Their game was continued with great enthusiasm every time they re-met over the weekend.
One of the interesting things about the trip this time around was that the kids actually occasionally wanted some quiet time in our room.
One of Finn's weekend favorites was "The Egg Man" (Yes, I did a lot of singing "I Am the Walrus"). This was a vendor who was there selling the Egg Game, a pretty cool game where the object is to cooperatively keep a stone egg spinning on a round, flat surface. Finn (who has recently been declaring everything even remotely egg-shaped to be a dinosaur egg) spent a great deal of time with this man, including sitting on his shoulders for part of one of the evening concerts. He has mentioned several times that he loves and misses the Egg Man. For the record, we did buy an egg game. It's actually quite fun.
Sounds awesome. Do we get to see pics? Did you attend any of the talks?
ReplyDeleteI don't think there was a single picture taken... too hectic, man. I went to see David Waynforth's "If you give a kid a cookie" and Emile attended Ren Allen's circle chat "Freedom vs. License" or something like that. Waynforth's talk was quite good... lots of graphs and study results and statistics that appealed to my nerdsoul. Emile was frustrated by the direction the circle chat ended up going. Other than that we mostly just played.
ReplyDeleteYou *wish* the conference people were nerdy enough to do the cool recursive-acronym-GNU-thing ;)
ReplyDeleteAnd also, the water sculpture-fountain-artificial-river thing in Esther Shore Park in Vancouver is super! We need one in the Rogue Valley somewhere!