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We do like to be beside the sea

10 September, 2004
Posted in: Princess

Yesterday at the instigation of the Glam Potter, she and I along with our progeny went to the Belgian coast. So did every one else in Brussels which was why we had to stand all the way there on the train. I had never been to Blankenberg before and I liked it. It’s a lot more down at heel than Knokke and much more appealing. It is full of older people. We were nearly knocked down by a stampede of pensioners as we got off the train. “Anxious to make full use of the time they have left” observed the GP sagely. And it has slightly tatty shops. It is marginally more unspoilt than Knokke, but still boasts rows of high rise buildings on the sea front which is such a delightful feature of the Belgian coast.

We went to lunch in a place called Le Pingouin and if you ever find yourself in Blankenberg with a small child, I cannot recommend it too highly. It’s pleasant. They have high chairs. And colouring pencils. And lovely staff who are happy to reheat baby food and sweep up broken plates. Fantastic. And then on to the beach.

Girls ecstatic at sight of sea. Both ran down to the shore. Then retrieved by anxious mothers and put in their togs and smeared with suncream. Ran down to the shore again and ran screaming into the sea. Ran out again immediately roaring with indignation. “Cole” said the Princess pointing a finger quivering with rage at the water. Well, that’s the north sea for you girls. Their most recent experiences of sea had been in Guadeloupe and Sicily respectively and they hadn’t been fully aware that it came in different temperatures. The Princess, poured a bucket of sea water over herself to double check and confirmed her initial diagnosis. Very “cole”.

Nevertheless, they loved it and except for some mild bickering over buckets and spades all was rosy.

The next bit is only to be read by experienced parents or those with nerves of steel and strong stomachs (that means it’s off limits for you, C).

The Princess was wearing her Guadeloupe t-shirt, a present from baby L. I noticed a nasty brown stain around the hem. Alas. My worst fear had been realised. I grabbed the Princess and put her on the changing mat, which was sand free, however, the strong wind ensured that this was not for long.  She had produced what was, even by her high standards, an impressively large poo. She wriggled, I struggled, the wind blew, the GP commented from a safe distance – you’ve nearly got it all now – um, I think that’s some on her knee/your elbow/your t-shirt/um, is that some on the back of her neck? As I worked, the GP regaled me with some of her own great poo stories. Like the time baby L, naked, produced a perfect poo in front of a family group on the beach at Guadeloupe. Hard to know what the etiquette is there, I grant you.  Or the time the GP went in to baby L’s room to get her up for the day and heard her cheerfully singing to herself as she went in the door. That’s nice thought the GP. When she went in she found that baby L had stripped off all her clothes and produced a big poo which she had been busily smearing all over her person and the cot. “Poo” she said happily pointing to her arm as the GP recoiled in horror. Apparently it was like a dirty protest in there.

Anyway, I finished my labours, we finished our day at the beach and we all went home. When I got back, I had the revolting contents of a number of plastic bags to deal with. I decided that the best thing to do would be to suspend her togs in the toilet and flush a number of times before putting them in the washing machine. Can I offer some advice here?  Don’t try to clean togs in a toilet with a cistern which takes ages to refill while simultaneously trying to keep a toddler away but yet within view (so that she doesn’t kill herself on the million and one booby traps around the house). This advice is free. Anyway, once the flushing was over, I put my filthy cargo in the washing machine in the kitchen and put it on straight away, I mean, you wouldn’t want that to sit dirty in the washing machine for any appreciable length of time. Then after a thorough scrub for both of us, I began to prepare the Princess’s dinner. In the kitchen, with the washing machine on. She is scared of electrical appliances. Even very silent ones. She demanded to be held. Trying. I put her into her high chair with her dinner in front of her. She looked dolefully at the washing machine and held out her hands to be lifted up.  I encouraged her to try her dinner. She was hungry, she compromised.  Flushed with success, I decided to unload the dishwasher. She didn’t like that much.  She tossed her dinner from her and stood up in her high chair, I zoomed over and rescued her.  Mr. Waffle arrived home at that moment to find me covered in egg with a plate in one hand and a howling baby in the other. He hesitated on the threshhold of the kitchen.  “Nice day at the beach?”

Well, on the whole, yes.

Comments
jackdalton

on 10 September 2004 at 17:16

Can’t see the appeal myself, silver. Poo on the hem of a t-shirt does nothing for Princess’s street cred. And then exposing the royal bum in an attempt to have the offending substance sand blasting off…. god, some mothers are fierce cruel altogether.
[Wonder who won the bickering over those buckets and spades – waf or the glam potter?]

silveretta

on 10 September 2004 at 17:19

Jack – you’ve not lived until you’ve sat in the highest chair in the room and just chucked your food any darn place you please.

jackdalton

on 10 September 2004 at 17:44

Do the liquid resources of a three-day party distributed from a mezzanine floor count as ‘food’?

silveretta

on 10 September 2004 at 17:55

Probably not my first choice of repasts for, say, your in-laws. But then again…

jackdalton

on 10 September 2004 at 18:13
(
Comment Modified) Oh good! I’m covered so. Or rather just about everyone else in the place was.
Funny what seems funny when you’re there…. and shameful everafter!! (Of course that was the Older Me — I’m much better behaved these days.)

belgianwaffle

on 12 September 2004 at 22:24

Hey guys, glad you like the food throwing…

Further information on the linguistic regime

8 September, 2004
Posted in: Mr. Waffle, Princess

Mr. Waffle says it’s dodo not do do, so now you know, just in case it ever arises. Dodo in French is one of those false friends.

He further points out that her first sentence was a French one.  She said “Meunier tu dors“. In fact she says “Meunier tu dors” a lot. This is the first line of a French song her papa sings to her. It means “Miller, you sleep”. It goes on to describe the terrible consequences to his windmill.  I’m guessing here, but I suspect that she doesn’t know precisely what it means, so I’m not sure that counts. I therefore submit that the jury is still out on the first sentence.

Comments
silveretta

on 08 September 2004 at 23:40

To be honest Loco, I thought it was something you trod in – not that I’m in the habit of treading on dead birds. Anyhow, I think it’d be so cool if the first words a child of mine spoke were French. Actually, I’d be quite chuffed if they weren’t swear words, but still – big up the Princess.

jackdalton

on 08 September 2004 at 23:41

I’d comment on this entry except that I’m still miffed about being stuck in the corner; lonely and unloooved…. And anyway, I reckon what she said was ‘moon ear two door’.And that’s not a sentence, even in Cork.

lauren35

on 09 September 2004 at 19:57

Lucky Princess, I was very jealous of friends at school who were bilingual – it’s so exotic…

belgianwaffle

on 10 September 2004 at 10:59

Loco, I was hoping for the Banks, obviously. Silver, touched by your enthusiasm and, yes, swear words are a problem – we’re doing good work with darn now though. Jack, come out of the corner, we still love you, it’s only for your own good, it hurts me more than it hurts you etc. Lauren, early days really, so far she’s not even monolingual, but hope springs eternal.

Linguistic regime

8 September, 2004
Posted in: Mr. Waffle, Princess

I’m going to tell you something I have been keeping from you. Mr. Waffle spent his very early years in Canada. French Canada.  And then when he came home, he went to the French school and he stayed there when his parents went to South America (except he went to the Venezuelan French school, if you see what I mean – as he tells it, it was all kind of similar, lots of stuff about “our ancestors the Gauls”). And so now, he speaks perfect French. And this is very handy. And we do live in a francophone country.  And it seems a shame to waste all this knowledge. So, to cut a long story short, before the Princess was born, I persuaded him that he should speak French to her. He was reluctant, but I was a pregnant juggernaut.

This has led to a number of difficulties which I had not anticipated. Firstly, Mr. Waffle spends a lot of time worrying over “bringing up your child to be bilingual” websites and secondly, whenever we meet Irish friends (from whom my loving spouse has spent a lifetime concealing his perfect French, for reasons I can’t entirely fathom, something to do with not showing off, I think) my husband communicates with his daughter in grunts.

A third difficulty has just emerged. The Princess is starting to talk. Before our holidays, she had a range of English words but due to intense hot housing from her father over the summer holidays, there’s no doubt that la francophonie is pulling ahead. You may think French is hard but there are a lot of easy words like “l’eau” for water and “la” for there and “dodo” for sleep (important note here, in case you might be hoping to use this expression in France – now that you regard this website as an authority on the French language – grown-ups say dormir but do do is permissible for the under 3s). And “oui” for yes.  Despite my promotion of the English alternatives, she is very taken with the French. Our conversations go like this:

Princess, pointing at fountain: L’eau, l’eau

Me: Yes, water.

P, in tones of impatience: L’eau, l’eau, l’eau.

Me: I see the water.

P, with pathetic sigh: L’eau.

Or another favourite:

Me: Would you like to go for a nap?

P – Blank expression.

Me: Nappedy wappedy (stop sniggering at the back).

P – Continues blank.

Me: Lie face on hand and make snoring noise.

P, in tones of delight: Ah, dodo, oui.

Comments
belgianwaffle

on 08 September 2004 at 20:12

Well, before we undertake that kind of commitment I’d like to know what your nap schedule is like.

silveretta

on 08 September 2004 at 23:32

2-6, noon and night, occasional dribble naturally, and I get kind of needy if I’m not given a bottle of an evening.

Krista

(Homepage)

on 09 September 2004 at 15:54

My husband is German and I am American and we adopted a baby (now 4 months) and will have a little boy in December. My husband ONLY speaks German to her and it is a race to see if she speaks the German or English first. We have many friends that raised bi-lingual children and the only disadvantage I have ever seen is a slight delay in speech in the beginning but it is amazing the advantage they have later on. Our friend’s (French/American)children know exactly who to speak what language to! Anyway, it is an interesting topic to explore. Feel free to follow our blog too, if you like.
Beth
(Homepage)

on 10 September 2004 at 00:45

We have neighbors that did that, but once their little boy went to school he lost all his French. His mother, who is from Normandy, is devastated.
belgianwaffle
on 10 September 2004 at 10:56

Silver, you’re on. Thanks Krista, fingers crossed and all that. Beth, this is ominous. Maybe we’ll just have to send her to the French school so that she can learn about her ancestors the gauls..

No thank you, doctor

6 September, 2004
Posted in: Princess

The Princess and I are traumatised. I knew that there was going to be trouble when she took one look at the metre stick he was going to use to measure her and started to bawl hysterically. Her sobbing increased in intensity as he measured her head, weighed her, looked down her throat, put a stethoscope to her chest and shone a bright light in her ears. She looked at him dubiously as he paused in his labours to lay out his two shots and sobbed quietly. Her indignation increased ten fold when she discovered that he was going to give her one in the leg and then one in the arm. She only stopped sobbing as we were leaving and waved bye bye to the doctor in a feeble kind of way. She is now napping to recover from the trauma and I am having a cup of tea. Wait until I tell her that she has to go back for a booster shot in February.

Comments
lauren35

on 06 September 2004 at 15:09

I remember going for a vaccination and being given a plaster for my teddy – I was so impressed that I forgot to cry.

silveretta

on 06 September 2004 at 16:58

A free plaster always does that for me too Lauren.

jackdalton

on 06 September 2004 at 21:44

So.. why was he sobbing quietly after laying out his shots?
And can I have a plaster too, please?

Thierry

on 06 September 2004 at 22:40

Do you ever think about the terrible shiver caused by a cold stethoscope one puts on your chest ?
For this reason at least, poor Princess’s anxiety is totally understandable. (^_^)
belgianwaffle
on 08 September 2004 at 16:15

Thank you chintzy. You are kind and good. Lauren, you were obviously a more sophisticated child than our Princess. Jack, that should be Silveretta’s line. Silver, are you feeding Jack lines? Thierry, the doctor says it’s a special paediatric non chill stethoscope but I don’t know why we should believe him, he made my baby cry.

nic

on 08 September 2004 at 16:29

the princess and the pea …
diatrician.

Mostly about luggage

6 September, 2004
Posted in: Mr. Waffle, Princess

We had dreadful trouble with luggage this holiday.  Especially the buggy.  Considering that every time we took it to the steps of the plane every time, it was impressive that it was lost returning from Ireland to Brussels and then once recovered, lost again on the way from Rome to Palermo.  I must say, this cast a pall over the first couple of days in Sicily.  Lugging around a 10 kilo baby will tire you out.  Also, due to my superior Italian skills, I spent a lot of time on to lost luggage in Palermo airport.  This also cast a damper. After 3 days there was great news, the buggy had been found.  Mr. Waffle and his papa drove into Palermo (an hour and a half from our guesthouse) and tried to pick it up.  In this they were somewhat hampered by Italian bureaucracy. As they kicked their heels in the baggage hall waiting for someone to come and deal with them, Mr. Waffle senior saw a familiar purple and pink elephant.  Yes, it was Dumbo, attached to the buggy, you understand. Showing the kind of enterprise which has made him a captain of industry, he tucked it under his arm and walked out, dragging his son behind him.  The whole rescue was achieved without filling in a single piece of paper.  This was perhaps why Mr. Waffle was nervous when we checked back in for Palermo Rome and they said suspiciously “Hmm, I seem to recognise your name, did you lose some luggage?”. I’d say that the amount of paperwork associated with the buggy heist has made our name mud around the greater Palermo area.

For greater economy, we were flying point to point airlines and we had two hours in Rome to rescue our luggage from our Palermo flight and get it checked in for the Brussels flight.  In retrospect, this was too short.  Our Palermo flight was delayed by an hour and it took a good 35 minutes for the luggage to arrive off the plane.  We were busy formulating emergency overnight in Rome strategies, when Mr. Waffle decided that the Princess and I should go ahead and stall the Brussels flight.  Again, in retrospect, this was not a great idea.  We scooted off to the international terminal, a brisk 20 minute walk just in time to see 2 besuited Virgin officials leaving their post chatting amicably.  Frantically, I cut in front of two innocent souls at the top of the adjoining queue and panted “is the Bxls flight closed?”  “No, madam, you can check-in here”.  Fantastic. Now all I had to do was wait for Mr. Waffle and the luggage.  “Madam, you need to check in immediately”. “Um, yes, just need to make a quick phone call”.  Zoom off to sound of despairing sigh behind me.  Arrive at phone booth to find that it will not take 2 euro coins.  Reckon that this is the minimum I will need as Mr. Waffle has Belgian mobile. Curse at great length. Princess looks shocked. Appalled Italian lady presses 20 cents on me in the hope it will help. Go back and stand in front of check in lady. “My husband is just coming with the luggage.”. “I’m sorry madam, but we can’t wait any longer, you’ll have to check in now”.  Princess begins to wail in sympathy. Forgetting that I am in English speaking land say “Not now darling, Mummy is very tense”.  Mummy is not made any less tense by smirks of surrounding English speakers and reluctantly hands over passport and tickets and then – insert Chariots of Fire music – Mr. Waffle comes running around the corner, dripping sweat and carting our luggage.  Hurrah.  Nice check-in lady says we will have to run.  We do and arrive in good time to queue with other punters. And miraculously, all our luggage makes it to Brussels too.

Wedding Guests

At a wedding, you often get friends of the happy couple’s parents and so it was here.  I remarked to a nice Canadian lady, a friend of the Waffle seniors’ for many years that Mr. Waffle looked very handsome in his best man gear. Inocuous comment, you might feel.  She considered the remark carefully and said “You know, he is, he used to be very geeky, but he’s grown out of it”. As a friend of Mr. Waffle’s said later when I related this to him “I would never have said that – I might have said that he was good at maths or excelled in classics…” Clearly, the Canadians believe in telling it like it is.

Comments
jackdalton

on 07 September 2004 at 20:47

On behalf of the rest of the people of Ireland who blog on 20six, I would like to apologise for what Locotes has just said. You are not, in the eyes of the vast majority of us, a baggage.
Arrangements are now being made to have his green knee-socks, russet kilt, waistcoat and green hat taken away for storage in a safe place.

Locotes

on 07 September 2004 at 22:31

*cough*
stirrer!
*cough*

belgianwaffle
on 08 September 2004 at 16:12

Hello lads. Locotes, I am touched by your comment and accept it in the spirit in which it was offered. Jack, go and stand in the corner.

Locotes

on 08 September 2004 at 18:18

You’re most welcome.
*points and laughs at jack in the corner*

jackdalton

on 08 September 2004 at 23:26

Oh this is more of it… he gets to call you a baggage and all I get is the kind of treatment a tense mummy resorts too when the Cork Dry runs out…
🙁

belgianwaffle

on 10 September 2004 at 11:39

Now now lads, let’s put it all behind us..

Sicily

4 September, 2004
Posted in: Family, Travel

To celebrate the arrival of our new fridge, Mr. Waffle has taken the Princess to the supermarket to buy lots of frozen food, leaving me here all alone. Most thrilling. So let me use this time productively to tell you about our Sicilian odyssey.

Let me group my observations:

Laundry

Do not for a second assume that by handwashing clothes you can clean them to the same kind of standard as a machine does. After ten days of handwashing, our clothes were filthy and revolting. My father-in-law, the captain of industry, also resorted to handwashing but, somehow, he never looked quite as grubby as us. On the plus side our clothes never blew away (held down by weight of accumulated grime). However, my mother-in-law determined that the capt’s clothes would never dry in the shower and put them on the balcony, from whence “a garment” drifted down into the private area of the guesthouse. A couple of days later I was witness to the exquisitely embarrassing moment when the lady of the house asked my poor mortified father-in-law whether the garment she was holding between outstretched finger and thumb belonged to him.

The Princess

She had the time of her life. There was not a moment when she was not surrounded by adoring admirers. One of our guidebooks said that the Sicilians worship children.  They’re not kidding. And then there were all the relatives. Dutiful grandparents who babysat and obeyed the imperial will. Publishing exec who was perhaps less instantly obedient to the royal will but still did her bidding on most requests.  She was strangely reluctant to fetch the Princess’s ball from wherever it was thrown. She explained, as she tried to catch the ball and missed, that she was never one of those hockey girls. Well no, I can see that, if she thought that you needed to catch the ball, that shows a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of the game.

I regret to say, however, that the Princess was not in her best looks. On the first night she was eaten alive by mosquitos and she has, even now, not entirely recovered her looks. Then she looked like a small pox victim. In fact, someone at the beach asked whether she had chicken pox. This was not great for wedding pics. Oh well, she didn’t care.

And she loved the beach unconditionally. She loved swimming in the sea and playing with sand on the edge of the water. It was wonderful to see her little face light up when she saw the water. Due to her parents’ diligence she was not sun burnt once (smug face). On our last day an Italian lady came up to worship at her shrine and asked, looking at our milky white bodies, whether it was the first day of our holidays. No, I said, the tenth. She called her friends to come and look at us. It is difficult to maintain smugness in these circumstances.

The Food

Inexpressably fabulous. Best part was the wonderful Villa Raino where the food was the best we had in Sicily (and that’s saying something) and the people were fantastic. We may have been assisted by the fact that the bride’s father is a mate of the owner, but really, they were marvellous. The ten year old daughter of the house entertained and looked after the Princess, the mother ironed my going out dress for me. The father whipped up delicious meals at odd times and short notice. And they had a pool. When we go back, and we will be going back, we will spend all our time there.

Sicilians also do ice cream in a brioche bun which I thought was great, others were not so keen. My saintly father-in-law bought me some and then he watched me eat it through gritted teeth (his, not mine, you understand).

The wedding

My new sister-in-law is a very good looking girl and tall and thin and she dresses beautifully. I try not to hold this against her as she is also a really lovely person but you can imagine what a trial it is to me. For her wedding she surpassed herself, she looked unbelievably beautiful. And the church was gorgeous.  And the Italians played with the Princess at the back of the church while Mr. Waffle carried out his best man duties at the front. And the publishing exec sang and her cousin played. It was all lovely.

And then off to the reception. Italian wedding dinners tend to have many courses. The bride’s da wanted 12. She wanted 4. They seem to have settled on 8. My God, what a lot of food. We sat down about 8.30 (having first had some antipasti outside to take the edge off our hunger) and ate solidly until 1.15 in the morning.

Then for the speeches. This took the Italian relatives a bit by surprise as, given the length of dinner, they don’t go in much for speeches. All the speakers spoke in English and Italian. No surprises that the bride and her father spoke Italian, but I think everyone was amazed by Mr. Waffle’s fluency and his father’s. The groom had studied Italian, so less amazement there. In fact, Mr. Waffle is a con artist, he can speak a bit of Italian, but his vocabulary is minimal (he got an Italian colleague to help him with his speech). However, he has a brilliant Italian accent. So even though I speak far better Italian than he does, people always turn to him expectantly given his fabulous pronounciation. Life is full of injustice. Though all the speeches were very good, the big surprise was the groom. Like his brother, when asked to name an emotion, he will usually say something like “hunger, does hunger count?” In fact, more often than not, he will deflect questioners by saying “ah, you know yourself”. This is surprisingly effective. So, it was all the more touching to hear him speak affectionately about his bride in public and enumerate some of her many fabulous qualities. The publishing exec who, like her papa, is “made of reinforced marshmallow” wept copiously and a number of us shed furtive tears.

So then at 2 there was dancing. The brother-in-law used to play in a band and he imported them for the event. The lead singer described how he (b-i-l) had asked would they play at his wedding and they said – of course where is it, Dalkey, Killiney, Dun Laoghaire? No, Sicily. But they were committed by then. And they were a great band. Wedding bands are usually pretty awful. After they finished I told the lead singer that they were the best wedding band I had ever heard. He smiled politely. Mr Waffle hissed in a furious undervoice that they weren’t a wedding band, they were just doing this wedding. Oh well. Thrillingly, the groom joined them on keyboards for a while and we got to see him in action.

At 4.00 the disco started, but secure in the knowledge that the Princess would rise at 7 we reluctantly went to bed. This is officially the latest night we have had since she was born. And, we would have loved to stay later. Fantastic.

Comments
belgianwaffle

on 06 September 2004 at 09:38

Hmm. Pero, non credo che sia giusto…
Liked your post about your cv by the by.

jackdalton

on 06 September 2004 at 10:42

Triste, ma allineare…. 😉

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