All posts by Peter

Chelsea: Luging and So Much More

Lovely weekend at Paul and Judy and Jamie and Willa’s house in Chelsea, Quebec.

Every winter, you may recall, their property turns into a wonderland of seasonal sports: Paul creates both an outdoor hockey rink (complete with boards, lights, a net and a plywood goalie) and a luge run. And each year the luge run gets more spectacular.


Willa and Jamie in their respective ice caves.

This year’s run is the best yet. A couple of years ago, the first corner not only bled some of your speed, but generally looked for other things to bleed or bruise. Now it’s pure acceleration.

We all had a ball. In the Olympic spirit, Jon launched almost every run with the series of beeps that you hear in downhill skiing events.



Killer g-forces near late in the run. Click for a QuickTime movie!


Here’s the entire crew setting up a complicated trucking shot, for the 14 second movie. Just an excerpt from The Making of the Chelsea Luge 2006 book that’s coming out next month.

It was also Jon’s first time in a hot tub. He’d been fretting about it for weeks, and all I wanted was for him to try it for a few seconds, especially given that it’s out in the snow. All that worry was for naught: he’s hooked.

The next morning Judy awoke us around 8 a.m. with a single sentence. “There’s a wolf in our backyard.” Well, we’ve all decided since that it was a coyote (go to this Wolf vs. Coyote guide and judge for yourself) that was maybe 20 metres from the hot tub Jon and I that had been in 12 hours before. Most of us watched (and snapped photos and video) in awe as it growled at crows and finished off most of a deer carcass, (Jon and Jamie slept through—no doubt intent on growing even taller and putting their parents in the poorhouse).


Click for a QuickTime movie of the coyote

Germination

Jon’s latest post denotes a lot of activity backstage.

As a wee tot, there were specific areas of imagination that we just could not get to germinate. His sense of humour developed, his musical sense bloomed, but even as his visual comprehension grew, Jon rarely showed any interest in imaginative play with toys, especially trucks or dolls, where one transfers some humanity into the object. In the past two years, the stuffed animals have taken on a position of interest and love—that’s partially a vision thing coming on-line—but still nothing for role-playing.

So we come to September, when he wrote a little story at school about a giraffe named Lady Cook. His teacher Tami had a true challenge in trying to get him to use his imagination to invent a name for the giraffe. If it wasn’t known and couldn’t be remembered, where was it supposed to come from? It took Jon 25 minutes of intellectual meltdown to get there.

A month later, Jon wrote another story, about Jake the Snake, based on a snake picture. With Tami’s help, the name took only 2-3 minutes.

Last week we had another Breakthough Day. Tami sat down with Jon initially to teach quotation marks, given that his current reading assignment is filled with them, and he doesn’t seem to be thrown off by them. But instead of doing the expected and quoting typical phrases of the people around him, Jon insisted on quoting animals. Tami upped the ante by insisting that any initial animal noise be given a real meaning. Instead of being stymied, Jon’s hands couldn’t keep up with his ideas of what the animals were saying, without any prompting. Tami just sat back and watched.

He got jammed twice. He couldn’t think of what bears say—he knew what they meant, in English, that much was obvious, but what’s their noise again?—and by the end of the list he was trying to finish and couldn’t come up with another animal, so Tami tossed in birds, and Jon, somewhat impatiently, knew what they would say, of course.

That was before lunch.

After lunch, Tami decided, given the way the ball was rolling, to “press her luck” and revisit names. Once again, he became distressed, “I don’t know! I don’t remember!”. Tami reminded Jon he didn’t have to know or remember, he could make them up. He started to giggle, and then set to work creating names within seconds, whipping off 6 sentences in less that five minutes. And with names like Jine, Gow and Lund, he put those folks at the IKEA catalogue to shame. Yay Jon!

Above one

I confess that I went to The National Post’s website (dosing up on anti-histamines beforehand so I wouldn’t break out in hives) to see whether they had an inside scoop on the new federal cabinet. They didn’t, but John Ivinson did talk to an unnamed Liberal insider about the many pitfalls that are part of putting a cabinet together, which ended in this happy little quote:

This is not a measure of absolute brains, but how smart you are divided by how smart you think you are. You always have to keep that ratio above one.