Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Jamie visits Norwich


We met Caleb in Albany on Friday afternoon and brought Jamie back with us, bag and baggage.  He brought along a Victoria's Secret bag full of toys -- mostly trains, natch -- and some of the trains went with him everywhere all weekend, even outside to play in the snow.  (They're in the bag.)


 He brought his sled along from Waltham.  It was too cold to stay out long on Saturday, when we took these pictures, but it was warmer the next day and he had a lot of fun getting hauled around the yard and sliding down the hill in the backyard.



We built a snowman on Sunday.  He was very perplexed as to why it had a carrot for a nose and why he couldn't eat it.  (Luckily, Dad gave us two, so he ate the other one.) Update: if you enlarge the second picture, you can see the partially-eaten second carrot in his hand.



He chose to wear his train sweater two out of the three days he was here. I think he's pointing at a train on the floor to compare it to his sweater.


He wore it (under the coat) to the Train Museum, where he was enthralled by the electric trains of various sizes buzzing happily around half a dozen detailed layouts of landscapes dotted with houses, stores, trees, stores, trainyards, roundhouses, and busy model people doing busy model things.  There was a detailed layout of Norwich in the 1950s, a circus train, a fantastically detailed model of a Corvette car dealership, a big train running around the ceiling that used to be up by the ceiling at the Tops supermarket (do you remember that?  I do, sort of) and a trolley car zinging back and forth and back and forth, as well as showcases on every wall full of all kinds of toy train cars and equipment. Jamie wasn't allowed to touch the trains, but it didn't seem to bother him, and there were buttons he could push to load logs from a conveyor belt onto a train car, unload milk cans from a refrigerator car, operate carnival rides by the circus train and such.  He was enchanted for well over an hour, asked lots of questions that almost all began with "Why," talked nonstop and made a hit with the half-dozen senior citizens who belong to the Model Railroad Society, set up the layouts, run the museum and operate the trains to make small boys smile.  They told him that they used to have a Thomas engine but its motor burned out, and that fascinated and mystified him -- why did they have a Thomas train?  Why didn't they have Rosie?  Why did the motor burn out?  Why couldn't they fix it?  Why couldn't they buy a new motor?  (Couldn't find one, they said.)  Why couldn't he see it?  Why?  Why? Why?



It's officially called the Bullthistle Model Railroad Museum and it's a pretty great little place.  Jamie asked if we could go back the next day, but it's only open on Saturday afternoons.  We'll go back next time he's here on a weekend.  You should come, too.


We went to the Classic Car Museum the next day.  Dad had previously visited with Grandma Murphy, but I'd never been there before.  I was amazed by how absolutely beautiful and interesting the cars are.   There are over 160 of them -- many of them rare or unique -- as well as displays of period clothing, airplane engines and other intriguing things.  You could spend hours there.  Jamie, however, was not as interested in cars that don't move as trains that do.  He still had fun; he liked the two cars he was allowed to climb into, as well as the long broad corridors between the cars -- good for running Very Fast -- and the gift shop, where he acquired a new shiny red toy sports car.  We'll go back when he's older.  You should come too. 


Back at home, we made some playdough, and he spent a long time happily messing around with rolling pins, cookie cutters and other implements of playdough destruction.



"Grandma, I have a very important job to do."


He slept 12 hours every night without a break, wore undies successfully during the day, and was happy and cooperative all the time.  No meltdowns, no crankiness, even though he took no naps.  (We just didn't try, figuring it would be a struggle and he'd sleep better at night without them.)


However, he did get tired of having his picture taken.


On Monday, we met the Vanderhoofs for lunch and a Jamie-handoff at a friendly little restaurant in PA just a short way south of the NY border.  The nice waitress took our picture.  


Dad got Jamie to smile for the pictures by ordering him not to laugh.  (That tactic is working really well on him right now.)  Here's Jamie sassing Dad by disobeying him.


Then, off he went with Nanna and Pop-Pop.  

We had a great time.

4 comments:

Laura said...

I just don't want that part!!!

Mom said...

Laura, Caleb asked us to try to get him to go to bed without his pacifier because it chaps the skin around his mouth. At bedtime, Jamie asked for it. When I tried to discuss the possibility of going to bed without it, he said, "I just don't want to talk about it."

Mary Link said...

Too cute. Thanks for sharing. I want a Jamie vacation too! And to go to all those fun museums. Next time he is in Western Mass, he might want to check out the train displays at Yankee Candle. We used to take our nephew who was also a train crazy boy. There are whole worlds in there with trains going all over. Love,
Marylink

Laura said...

I just literally LOLd at work. "I just don't want to talk about it." Hehe