Monday, April 19, 2010

Throughout the Year(s)



Based on the past few days it seems that Utah has decided once again to skip Spring and launch straight into the summer. For many people, summer is the best time to have a backyard. It means firing up the grill, eating outside, chilling on the porch, maybe playing in the pool, and enjoying warm summer nights. For kids, it could mean running through the sprinklers, spraying each other with the hose, playing with bubbles, jumping on the trampoline, or even just sitting in a nice puddle of mud.



However, I have lived in Utah long enough to know that it could snow next week. If/when that happens, does that signal an end to backyard fun? Of course not! When life gives you snow, you make a snow man! Or a snow fort. Or a snow angel. Or anything you want to. That, I think, is part of the magic of childhood. You do some exploring, take a look at what's around you, and have fun with it. It's something that kids are good at; something that comes naturally, and yet, it's something that we sometimes tend to become worse at as we grow older.



In a lot of ways, I still consider myself a kid. While we all have to grow up sometime, I think there are a lot of childlike qualities that we would do well to hold on to. After all, if you lose it completely, how are you going to teach your children how to build a snow man?

Monday, April 5, 2010

Charlie

It's nice having a good-sized backyard, because it is very hard to raise an "indoor" pig. This is the late Charlie, a pot-bellied pig who lived a long, full life and died of old age several years ago. When he was a piglet, we tried to keep him inside. It was a lot of fun for all of my cousins and I. Pigs really do make great pets...



...until they break into the cupboards and start eating the flour. Shortly after this incident, Charlie became an "outdoor" pig, which worked out great because he ate all of the under-ripe and rotten apples off of our lawn after they'd fallen from the tree.

Also important to keep in mind: pigs are difficult to house-train.