Nora has an announcement to make. Take it away, Nora…
That’s right. We’re expecting a son sometime at the beginning of May 2013, a month after Nora’s fourth birthday.
Here he is. A handsome lad, don’t you think?
December 20, 2012 By: erik Category: Family, News, Offspring, Parenting, Videos 173 views




(No Ratings Yet)Nora has an announcement to make. Take it away, Nora…
That’s right. We’re expecting a son sometime at the beginning of May 2013, a month after Nora’s fourth birthday.
Here he is. A handsome lad, don’t you think?
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Seven Months Old |
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| Well, it’s not like we can stop now! Yesterday we had a party for Nora’s seven month birthday. Her aunt, Spanish grandmother, and great-grandfather were in attendance. Hamburgers were on the menu again, and we had a wonderful feast. I’m always too hungry to take a photo of the actual hamburgers, though. Nora had a [...] | |
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Four Noras – From 6 months to 3.5 years |
| I love it when creative photography ideas come to fruition. When Nora was six months old, pretty much as soon as she could maintain a propped up sitting position in time for me to snap a photograph, I created a composite photograph of four of her sitting on our ugly green sofa. Then, a year [...] | |
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Ten Months Old |
| Nora turned ten months old on Sunday. Her grandparents and aunt came to have lunch. After breaking the hamburger rhythm with her previous month birthday on Christmas Eve, I decided to make a hamburger pie (aka. Cottage Pie) instead. It was delicious, of course. Most importantly, we had cake! Birthday girl’s eye view. She really [...] |

Whitby Harbour, UK

Fantastic.
Four year olds are pure id.
“Daddy, after I finish this dessert, I want another bowl filled to the top with nothing but [whipped] cream. Okay?”
Convinced my daughter to watch Star Wars with me by promising that it had a princess.

George Catlin, Prairie Meadows Burning, 1832
From the Smithsonian American Art Museum:
George Catlin painted ominous, swirling clouds of black smoke that loom out of the distance and drive the Indians before them. The artist was an eyewitness to such terrifying events, and described the fire’s “thunder rumbling as it goes.” But he also wrote that prairie fires made for “some of the most beautiful scenes that are to be witnessed in this country, and also some of the most sublime.”

