Sunday, December 12, 2004

Party on dude.


We should have known when Elsa wanted to wear tie dye that the girls were headed towards trouble. Last night they went to their first college kegger at the tender age of 3 months old. They were out way past their 8pm curfew, not getting in until after midnight. I'm not kidding. Yesterday was Santa Barbara's Day, named after the patron saint of geologists. Every year on this day, the Berkeley Geology Department gets together to celebrate the annual holiday party. It is great fun. Everyone comes from students, to profs, to visiting alumni. We never miss it. Not having babysitters within 2000 miles, we took the girls along. They did great. My little girls are attention hams. Thankfully, they do not appear to have inherited mommy's social anxiety. They love a crowd and were very well behaved.


Mark won this award, "department member most likely to get caught in a parent trap." Those Hayley Mills jokes never get old! Better than Olsen twins references, though.

And finally, a time lapsed photo sequence of Lily's new trick. She's ALMOST rolling over. ALMOST. She hasn't figured out how to move her arm out of the way. Instead, she keeps pivoting around her head in a big circle. Its pretty funny. And not to leave Elsa out, it appears she might be growing a tooth!





4 Comments:

At 9:49 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Wow, Santa Barbara day, eh? How weird is it, then, that your alma mater won another soccer national championship against UC-Santa Barbara on Santa Barbara Day Eve? Okay, it's not really that weird, but coincidences are cool to notice.

 
At 9:50 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Oh, and I forgot to acknowledge the source of the previous comment. That being me, and me being Clint.

 
At 9:25 AM, Blogger Brian said...

Hey, Lily's trick is kinda like the three stooges move where curly runs in circles on the ground. And that is a way cooler thing to learn than simply rolling over.

 
At 9:16 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Grover does something like that, except he's on his rear. We call it "being on his sit n'spin" for those of us who remember that dizzying 80's toy.

-Jessica

 

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