Background


Friday, April 20, 2012

Peacock Park


There's a really great picture hanging on one of the walls in my grandmother's house.  She has many walls full of many pictures.  One wall is dedicated to my daddy and his siblings. Another is home to pictures of my grandfather throughout his life.  Still another is dedicated to family members from generations ago. There's a wall of photos in the stairwell dedicated to all eleven of us grandbabes, we each have pictures taken at specific ages and stages in our lives.  And one wall hosts group pictures of all of us cousins as we were coming up.  The brood grows as the photos become more recent.  About half-way through is a photo with nine of the grandkids, yes, back in my heyday as youngest cousin.  Youngest, most tattle-tellin', board-game earthquaking, cousin.  The Montana cousins must have been in town for a few weeks that summer.  We're all sitting in Angel's same front lawn in Northwest Hills, hair sticking to our foreheads, and clothes sticking to our bodies.  We'd just been to Mayfield Park (fondly referred to as "Peacock Park" by the Flanagan cousins) for an afternoon with my daring grandmother, bless her heart, and I've got a trophy to prove it.  I doubt I found the peacock feather that I'm wielding in the picture, but there's no doubt in my mind that I threw the biggest fit and was allowed to hold the prize as my own for the photo op.  Did I mention that I have a lot of hell coming my way in this whole parenting gig?


Last week on a whim, we took Piercy Joye to Mayfield Park for a picnic and her first peacock sightings.  It's only a mile down the road, and has proven to be one of the biggest hits of her young life.

One of my favorite parts of being a parent has been re-discovering the simplicities of life, from  the lifecycle of a butterfly, to the enchanting beauty of a peacock.

Is this thing even real?

Seriously?


Piercy Joye loved their loud squawks, vibrating dances, and showy feathers.


Oh, AND, Mayfield Park is home to some of the most beautiful ponds in town.  Cue Photo Montage...



Dragonfly Friend





Turtle hiding under a lilypad




Somebody loves her Daddy!

Reflections....

Girls' Shot







Sweet face


Mommy Turtle and Baby Turtle


Learning

In the Trees

Rapunzel Bird




During a lunch of ham and cheese sandwiches and granny smith apples under the trees (yes, even for Little Miss, who is all about sandwiches right now), I realized for the umpteenth time how thankful I am for this beautifully simply life we have, the privilege of raising our daughter in this city we adore, and sharing memories with her in places where we have separate, beautiful first memories of our own.

For the record, we didn't find any spare peacock feathers, which has me wondering which of my wild boy cousins snagged a feather from a peacock's behind that hot, summer day.

Dallas

One of my very most favorite girlfriends from high school tied the knot in Dallas last weekend, and we were so thankful to be able to make the trip to visit with family and see a great friends.  Greg's Aunt Margo and Uncle Mike opened their beautiful house to us and Greg's mother, who was a phenomenal help to come with us for moral road-tripping and baby loving support!  When we got into town, Piercy Joye let me know right away that she was ready for a dip in the pool.  It may have been a little chilly, but she quickly settled in for some pool-side lounging time with her Great Aunt Margo.

Getting to know Aunt Margo

Taking Chompers for a Spin on Deck


This is MY Daddy.


Kisses, Kisses, Kisses.


Love those Love Handles!


Lunch-time Feastings!


Mommy and Daddy all Dressed Up!


Showing Great Uncle Mike How to Dance!

Metamorphisis



This was our twelve month appointment face last week. Thrillingly thrilled. I snapped this quickly right before we left for the doctor's office. I'm thinking of all of the things that have changed in the last twelve months (minus any real hair growth, of course), and it's reminding me of these friends we've been blessed with...


We've been inundated with Monarch caterpillars this spring.  Our poor Mexican Milkweed has had a bit of trouble keeping up with the monsters!  One day I counted more than three dozen. Greg and I finally registered our garden as an official butterfly habitat with the North American Butterfly Association, and the Browne Butterfly Bus Stop has been born!



Piercy and I were only able to find a couple of chrysalises. This one was next to the garbage and recycling cans, where it appears that many, many a pupae have spent days turning into their four-winged selves.  The golden flecks in the cocoon are incredible.  I cannot believe these simple creatures undergo such a phenomenal transformation in so little time.


 And now for a tour of the gardens...

Bat-Faced Cuphea (cute little bat!) 
Queen Elizabeth, Greg's very first successful propagation

Moonflower (Datura)

Lion's Paw

Maggie Rose



Beautiful plant I'm forgetting the name of that Greg's mother brought over

Mother of Thousands

Anacacho Orchid Tree

Sweet little maple coming back

Meyer Lemon Bloom!

Ice Plant a-Blooming

T-R-O-U-B-L-E



So here we are.

At ONE year.  Not two.  No, not terrible two.  


We're at the Curious-Dramatic-Head-Before-Body-Determined-Laughable One.


Did I mention that she often disappears when I turn my head for two seconds?


 And that this is usually where I find her?



 I love you, My Sweet P!