Sunday, June 27, 2010
Mo's New Look...
Chillin' under the kitchen table. Sometimes you just gotta rest your head.
Yup, he's a boy... and a working boy at that. Mo last week got to honeymoon with an Edmonton girl back at his childhood home near Fort McLeod. He was so exhausted when he got back to the city the next day.... what a tough life!
Hanging out with Chad and Sharon's daughter, Olivia, pre-haircut. Olivia loves reaching out to touch Mo's nose and paws.
Cat-like Qualities...
Neither Chryslyn nor myself are really "cat people," but we may have to get used to the idea, as Mo starts to show more and more feline characteristics. In addition to his tendancy to pounce cat-like when playing with his ball, Mo also has decided that window ledges are a good place to hang out! Don't ask how he balances.... We're not really sure (though he's not always successful).
Mo's Best Friend...
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Introducing Mo!
This is Mo, the new addition to our family. He's a 10-month old Australian multi-generation Labradoodle pup. We have become his guardians, which means he will be living with us but working as a stud for his owners from time to time. He comes from Puppy Love Labradoodles, which is a very nice family who breed multi-gen Labradoodles on an acreage outside of Fort Macleod. Occasionally, they get a guardian family to keep one of their breeding dogs so that it can receive more love and attention. Mo will work as a stud for three years before he is neutered; at that time, ownership will be transferred completely to us and he will be ours to keep for life!
Mo is a very gentle, cuddly dog. He's been very well behaved so far, even though his name suggests he may become known for his criminal behaviour (...According to the breeder, MO stands for Modus Operandi, as in a perpetrator's M.O. So far, however, Mo's biggest crimes have been thieving Chryslyn's slippers and socks. Generally he is a very good doggie.)
Play Time
Although we bought Mo several toys, his favourite is definitely one which we had in great supply in the house already.... It just so happens that his favourite toy is also one of my favourites! He's quite cat-like with his tennis ball, pouncing on it and swatting at it with his paws. He's a quick learner... I've already taught him the basics of fetch, although he tends to lose track of the ball fairly quickly with all that hair blinding him.
Although Mo is generally very gentle and timid, he does LOVE to run up and down the stairs. He's a teenager, so he's still fairly clumsy and sometimes wipes out, but generally he's getting more graceful with practice, often successfully jumping from the third or fourth stair the rest of the way down.
Cuddle time with Chryslyn!
A Working Dog!
I had to do some weekend work at the school today, so Mo decided to come along. He was excited to sniff all around my classroom, and managed to find a couple of jujubes and a jelly bean hidden in the nooks and crannies... He quickly surrendered them all to me, though! Such a good boy. Once he got bored of all that, he surprised me by hopping up on this shelf so he could look out the window at the rain and curl up by a computer until I was finished my work!
Tuesday, April 06, 2010
The Pysanka Process
In case anyone doesn't know and is interested how Ukrainian Easter eggs are created, these photos of my latest creation more or less show the process. The top photo shows the egg after being almost entirely covered in melted beeswax. In order to "draw" on the egg, you cover up any areas you want to remain a colour with a stylus filled with melted wax before dying the egg the next darker color. This preserves that portion of the egg from being died any further. You continue adding wax to the egg until you reach your final colour.
In this case, the egg had wax applied on white, and then was died and had wax applied on light yellow, dark yellow, orange, blue and red before being dipped in black. Wax didn't need to be applied to the black areas, as it was the final colour. As you can see in the top photo, sometimes you can see the colours a bit through the wax, but other times, if the wax burns a bit, it goes on rather black, entirely covering up the colour underneath.
The final step is melting the wax off, which I do in the oven, and then wiping the egg clean of any wax to reveal the vibrant colours underneath. It's a pretty amazing moment. If you ever played around in that seldom used dark room/photo lab in your old high school, it's kinda like that moment when you dip the exposed photo paper in the developer fluid, and the image magically appears out of the whiteness.
On a final note, as we all know, colour is relative to the colours around them. I'm quite pleased with the results of this egg, except for the pinkish tone that is supposed to be orange. I swear, when the whole egg was died and sitting in front of me, it looked reddish-orange. But up against the dark yellow and scarlet red of the final egg, it turned out pinkish, which was not my intention! The dying process is always a bit of a guessing game, especially when you are trying to combine colours to create other colours that you're too poor to buy!
Monday, April 05, 2010
Sunday, April 04, 2010
Easter
My first attempt at pysanki in probably 14 or 15 years! My wife's cousin's wife here in Lethbridge got interested in doing Ukrainian Easter Eggs through a friend at her work, so the two of us split the cost of some supplies at introduced the Friesen extended family to Pysanky at the family Easter gathering this year. The smell of the melting beeswax used in the process quickly took me back to my childhood... I love that sweet scent. And it was fun infusing some Ukrainian culture into the Mennonites!
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