(no subject)
Jul. 13th, 2008 06:42 amI had a busy and wholesome day with brother-the-younger and his kids (ages 3 and 6) yesterday. We visited (my) grandma, took short rides on a pony, went to a cave, did grocery shopping (where the kids rode in the cart and I made it "go fast" if they were quiet), and went swimming after dinner. It was a good day -- the kids were perky, in good moods, and largely on board with the day's activities.
Duncan likes to play "Dam" at the beach. He digs ahole reservoir and builds a dam around it and then pours water in until the water pretty much overtops the dam. It's a wonderful game and I play with him if I'm around. (Dam is also one of my more favorite beach games.) Anyway, yesterday we set up a river to flow into the reservoir, with dikes (?) alongside the river banks to help contain the water. Then, we poured water (using a five-gallon bucket so there would be fewer trips to the lake to fetch more water, a spectacular innovation from the mind of brother-the-younger) into the top of the river and watched the water flow downstream into the reservoir. Because the river was twisty, there was erosion at the turns and the "silt" (it's all sand) settled in the reservoir, filling it in. (This is a real problem for real dams in the real world. Realism in the Dam game is important to Duncan -- he puts lumpy pieces of sand, not-smoothed-out, along the dikes so that they're like rip-rap on real dams and retaining walls. The only reason we don't have spillways on the dam is that the sand won't hold up to having water running over it.) Anyway, the point here is to pour the water until it overtops the dam and the reservoir empties out. (After that, we rebuild the dam and start over. In this, we are very like the Army Corps of Engineers.) It was fun.
Duncan likes to play "Dam" at the beach. He digs a