Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Ski Babies


Skye signed the kids up for the ski program, the first winter they lived here in Reno.  Having lived always, at sea level, we were astonished that kids could attend school for just a half-day on Wednesdays, and then get up to our mountain and spend afternoons learning that most essential skill around here---skiing or snowboarding.  The lodge was filled with moms and dads, babies, equipment!  Shoes!  The school parents could hold a PTA meeting there because everyone was on that mountain.  The "Rosebud" ski program is some kind of magic.  You turn your kid in at their little gate---they slip a vinyl vest over the kid, hand you a claim ticket, slip the other half of the ticket into a clear plastic window on the front of the vest, and whisk your kid away.  They pop out through a door on the other side, suited up with helmets, goggles, boots and skis.  The little "rosebuds" lumber into a miniature red sleigh pulled by a snowmobile and off they go to the lift!  Sometimes you can catch a glimpse of the bright yellow vests, but mostly, the kids are just gone!  Some hours later, they reappear in the lodge with bright rosy cheeks, BRIGHT sparkling eyes!  Their hair is wet and steamy, they sit on stepped benches with hot chocolate in hand while their boots are removed...also steaming, gloves tucked into pockets, all smiles and you claim your baby with your little ticket!  They fall asleep in the car on the way home, and they sleep harder that night, than any night ever. 


That first year, Emma and Harrison were six, Carter was two and Dylan was just one year old.  They moved up the skill ranks...not always so easily, from "turtle" to "BEAR,"  and now beyond.  They crashed, they fell instead of smoothly skiing off of the lift, they complained of having been way too cold---but they just never came in!  They are all expert-level skiers now and ski all of the trails of our home mountain, Mt. Rose. They choose where to go based on the scenery; this year, they buried a little token by a tree, on their favorite trail. 

When I moved here, I kind of turned into a "ski-grandmother."  I don't ski, but I pushed them all to go and keep going.  My car was filled with cases of water, hot chocolate, "Hotties," just-add-water-dry-soup.  They constantly lost their $14 fleece face masks, so they chose fleece colors and I sewed them into tubes...about a hundred tubes---at 1 cent each, they haven't lost a single face mask...  I took them skiing whenever they even thought they might like to go, and sometimes when they didn't.  I wrestled their boots on, braided Emma's hair, whacked helmets on everyone, gloves, hotties in pockets and watched with a lump in my throat, as they clomped on their own to the "big" lift.  I put them out there in blizzards, out there in seven degrees, out there on warm sunny days when I had to fight them to take a jacket "in case the lift stops and you spend the night dangling there!"  I sometimes can't believe that I pushed them like that, to get out there like a "grown-up-quit-complaining-we'll-go-when-the-lift-closes!" At some point early on, it went past the delight of a half-day off from school, noodling around with friends in the snow.  At some point, they started to crave it. 

They've spoken of moments that were purely enchanting to them, moments the four of them shared together, off on their own mountain tops.  They've urged me to ski because they want me there with them for those moments.  I've come to realize that of all the childhood experiences, there is an almost total lack of self-destiny.  We decide when and what they'll eat, what they'll wear, where they'll go, sleep, be...at all times.  Kids make suggestions...a lot, but the final decision is always with their adult caretakers.  And we wonder why they're such crazy drivers at 16!!  Being able to ski allows a kid to make the decisions.  Their judgement is in play the whole time they're out there.  Carter recently sped around a blind curve, encountering a man stopped in the middle of the trail.  He instantly decided that he needed to crash on his own, because he could control the crash---more than he could control the certain bad injury if he hit the brick-wall-of-a-big-man.  He's had practice making instant and sound decisions like that!  There was no time, and he knew what to do! 

I want to learn to ski, to share their moments.  To breathe the air they describe as the most special air!  I won't be there as "the adult."  They're the experts out there and have proven themselves to be considerate and certain.  I want to be there to see their faces---not the rosy smiling "rosebud" faces of years ago, but the faces of maturity.  They're enjoying the view from the top of the world!  They know how to get there!  And they sure the heck know how to get back down! 





 Some kids in Whistler, Canada,  feeling what
Harrison and Emma, Carter and Dylan feel.  Lucky kids.


Friday, January 6, 2012

Dreaming of Snow





I LOVE it when it snows.  I wake up sometimes in the middle of the night, because I'm suddenly aware of an intense quiet.  It worried me at first, but now that I know what it is, I smile and sink back to sleep, all warm and safe and secure.  In the morning, I go to the window and my heart skips at the sight of the winter wonderland I knew I'd see, just there outside.  But it's January now, and this winter so far there has been NO snow!

It's all people are talking about, and even the ones who hate snow, are confused and disoriented.  On Christmas Eve, people celebrated breakfast in the cafe and felt the holiday only in the awareness that it was indeed, December 24.  There was a sweet, but tender mood in the room. The view outside our bay windows was the golden brown of autumn.  Even the snow-haters watch as fat flakes drift down...in past winters.  We've got a crazy Robin who has not migrated, and remains to defend our crabapple trees from all comers.  I worry for him/her if the temperature drops to normal, too suddenly! 

Trying to stay positive, I'm putting little squares of gingerbread on every plate, with sliced green pears.  I've got all cold-weather coq au vin, ribolitta, chicken paprikas and Basque cabbage soup on the menu.  I worry though, that when it does finally snow, it will dump and we won't be able to get out of the door...or worse even, that this will be the first year ever, that it doesn't snow at all!  In hopes of perpetuating the highlight of the season that seems to have slipped by too fast, I'm continuing to promote cranberries!  I've been serving a simple, unusual roasted cranberry side dish that may be the only savory cranberry recipe I ever use again.  To me, anyway, it's Christmas, it's holiday time, it's snow!






ROASTED CRANBERRIES
I recalled bits and pieces of a recipe I read somewhere, and just put this together from memory.

1 pound of thawed cranberries (or fresh)
1 1/4 cup sugar
3 Tbsp walnut oil
Fresh rosemary, thyme, and sage
1/2 tsp salt

1/4 cup red wine with 2 Tbsp water

3 Tbsp sugar
3 Tbsp red wine

Preheat oven 425 degrees

Mix cranberries with sugar, oil and salt, in a roasting pan.  Toss with the fresh herbs, and place in the oven for about 15 minutes (edges should begin to bubble)

Bring wine and water mixture to a boil and stir into the bubbling cranberries in the roasting pan

Cook 3 Tbsp sugar and 3 Tbsp wine until it turns to syrup

Return the pan to the oven, and roast until the cranberries shrivel, stirring occasionally for 10 to 15 minutes longer.

Remove cranberries from the oven, pull the fresh herbs out and stir the syrup in.  Serve hot or room temperature.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Long Winter's Nap



It hasn't been so quiet, and it hasn't been so peaceful...and I've certainly been wide awake.  But for the first time since we opened, nearly five years ago, we shuttered the cafe and had days in a row to do whatever we felt.  Bianca decided to cuddle up beside the fire with her dog.  She also cuddled up to her favorite Christmas present, a new vacuum...she dusted and vacuumed and loved the inside of her cozy house!  I gathered four of my grandchildren to Reno for a love fest.

The boys, Harrison and Carter, loved skiing everyday...the ice rainbows in the clouds...the grandeur of the Sierra Nevada and how alive you feel, to fill your lungs with mountain air.  Sasha and Piper also skied...they tortured three instructors over the course of three days.  Days four and five, I split them up with their own instructors...who quickly saw that the girls really CAN ski, rather than spending an expensive hour writhing in the snow, complaining, making snowballs...wicked girls.

We woke up when we wanted, and stayed up late! We hiked and the kids rock-climbed, we went to the movies, the museums, we ate ice cream and toured the gold/silver mine under Virginia City!  We fed mountain chickadees in the snow up at the Mt. Rose summit and rang in the New Year with Jr. Monopoly, chips and dip, sparkling cider and a hilltop view of the city's extravagant midnight fireworks. 

With all the chaos and clamor that are all of the hours kids are awake---Harrison announced that he wants to buy penny stocks, so couldn't stop loudly brainstorming strategy; Sasha leaped out of bed late one night to say that she couldn't sleep unless I fed her a prune!!!--- I could still hear myself thinking of how fortunate we have been, despite a wild year passed.  The new year offers hope again for a chance, a better outcome, steady ground, this time next year.   As I've enjoyed the luxury of slow-down this past week, watching my grandchildren rejoice in their adventures high in the mountains and down in our valley, I've recalled a quote from Georgie Connel Sicking: "With a gentle breeze blowing across a black sage valley and smell the earthy sagey freshness, none like it on earth. It sure makes life worth livin,' and you know when God was givin' He didn't shortchange Nevada."  We live in wide open beauty, we're healthy, we're together---we're blessed.

Happy New Year, dearest friends.

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