Orange County Kids Activities Blog

April 21, 2010

Enter Your Masterpiece in the Orange County Fair!

It’s time for creative kids in Orange County to show off their skills! Do you make the best brownies anyone has ever tasted? Have you taken an award-worthy photograph? Have you designed a jewelry masterpiece?

It has long been a tradition for artisans to enter their creations in the county fair competitions, but did you know that kids can get in on the act? Most of the competitions that adults enter also have a kids division for ages 3 to 8, a juniors division for ages 9 to 12, and a young adults division for ages 13 to 18.

The competitions that kids can enter are

  • Crafts
  • Photo Contest
  • Writing
  • Community Service
  • Painting & Drawing
  • Single-Day Contests
  • Farm & Garden
  • Floral
  • Collections
  • Culinary
  • Table Setting
  • Fiber Arts & Quilts
  • Hand Crafts & Hobbies
  • FFA
  • Jewelry
  • Fine Art
  • Fine Art Photography

There are subcategories for many of these competitions. You can see the whole list of categories and rules at 2010 Orange County Fair Competitions .

All entries will be displayed during the Orange County Fair in July and August. Imagine your masterpiece being part of the fair! Of course if you enter, your parents will have to take you to the fair to ride rides and eat junk food!

You have to live in Orange County to submit your work. The deadline for entering is May 26th. If you’re having trouble with the application, you can stop by the fairgrounds May 17-20 (Monday–Thursday), 1pm to 7pm or May 24-25 (Monday–Tuesday), 1pm to 7pm for help.

Who knows? You might even win a blue ribbon!

April 18, 2010

Time for Water Fun

Summer time in Orange County is almost here, and you know what that means – warm sunny days and no school. Kids look forward to summer all year, and with good reason. There are so many fun things to do in Orange County. So where do you start?

A lot of summertime activities center around water, whether it’s the pool, the beach, or a water park. The first order of business is to make sure that your kids are water safe. I use that term loosely. It’s not possible for a very young child – say under the age of five – to be water safe. Parents must be within arm’s reach. Still, children should start learning to swim early. They’ll get comfortable in the water and learn swimming skills that will eventually make them strong, safe swimmers.

Get your child enrolled in swim lessons as early in the season as you can. Here’s a listing of swimming lessons in Orange County. They’ll start off the summer with the right habits and incorporate some of what they’ve learned into their water play. To keep in practice, you could have them swim one lap, or whatever is appropriate for their age, before playing every time you go to the pool.

A lot of community pools aren’t heated this early in the season. Fortunately there are a lot of private swim schools with heated pools. If your child is sensitive to chlorine, you can even find salt water pools to learn in. Still, most pools are kept clean with chlorine – a lot of it. A lot of kids wear goggles in the pool, just because the chlorine is so strong.

If your kids are old enough to remember how to swim from one year to the next, they’re not going to want to take swim lessons with the little kids. If you are less certain about their skills than they are, there are other options to reinforce their swimming skills. You can sign them up for a swim team, an introductory water polo class, or a junior lifeguard program. Scouts often incorporate a swimming test into achievement requirements.

The beach is another place that you’ll be spending a lot of time this summer. The ocean can keep kids busy and happy for hours. There’s something endlessly fascinating about the waves. Even the smallest kids love to play chicken with the waves. There are a few things that are different, safety-wise, about the ocean. First, the water doesn’t hold still. Kids need to get familiar with the fact that they might be up to their knees one minute and up to their chest the next. Teach them how to behave when they wipe out. If they know what’s coming, they won’t panic. When they’re old enough, they need to learn about rip currents. Junior Lifeguard programs and surfing classes provide this kind of instruction.

The other big difference about the ocean is that it’s harder for you to see them, because the water’s not clear and they’re so far away if you’re on the beach. Always go to a beach with a lifeguard. Go into the water with them when they’re little. When they’re old enough to go into the surf on their own, set limits about how far out they can go, and have them stay with a buddy. Have them wear something that makes it easier for you to see them. Rashguards are a good idea anyway, and them come in very light materials. Have them come out of the water for a rest when they get tired. This is your opportunity to take your eyes off the water for a little while!

Most of all, let them play and wear themselves out. Kids and water are a perfect combination, and we’re lucky to have so many great places to play in the sun.

January 16, 2010

An Old Fashioned Remedy for ADHD

I read a great article in this month’s Parenting magazine about Nature Deficit Disorder. In it the author mentioned a study published by the American Journal of Public Health that found that exposure to nature reduced ADHD symptoms in children.

In this study they had children do typical weekend or after-school activities in three settings, indoors, outdoors in a built setting (like a blacktop area without much greenery), and outdoors in a mostly green setting. Then their parents rated their abilities on things like following directions in comparison with what was normal for that child. The results of the outdoor built setting were better than indoors. The results of the outdoor green setting were even better. It appears that the results were measured in the first hour after the activity. I would love to see further study on how long the results last.

Even without further study, though, this information could be useful to parents. Getting outdoors is inexpensive and good for all kids whether or not they have adhd. In fact, there’s a lot of discussion about what adhd is and even whether it’s real. For a ‘treatment’ like this, it doesn’t matter. If your child has trouble concentrating or completing tasks, is easily distracted or can’t sit still, try getting them more green outdoor time. There are no harmful side effects. If it helps even a little, you’re ahead.

Here are a few ideas to get you started. Maybe your children can come up with more.

  • Have kids walk or ride their bike to school, preferably through an area where they can see trees, grass, rocks and other cool stuff.
  • Set up a fun spot in your back yard where you child can go to read, play or maybe even do homework.
  • Hang a hummingbird feeder outside your child’s bedroom window.
  • Open the windows so your child will see the great outdoors sometimes even when they’re inside.
  • Put houseplants in the house, maybe even in your child’s room.
  • When you’re looking for something to do on a Saturday afternoon, head to one of the many wilderness areas in Orange County.
  • Sign your child up for one of the many children’s educational programs offered by these nature centers or sanctuaries. Don’t forget to allow some extra non-structured play time before or after class.
  • Join a club that does a lot of outdoor activities, like Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts or Indian Guides.
  • Don’t let poor weather stop your child from playing outdoors. Get rain boots and jackets, or just accept the fact that they’re going to get wet and muddy. They can clean up when they’re done.

December 3, 2009

Prepare Projects for Indoor Days

Ever have one of those days when the kids are house-bound and have nothing to do? Maybe they’re home sick, but they’re feeling well enough to be bored. Or maybe you’re trying to get some work done and you don’t have time to take them out somewhere. Those kinds of days sneak up on you when you don’t expect them. You need to have some indoor activities for kids at your fingertips.

Now is the time to get ready. Prepare a few projects that will keep the kids entertained. Get the materials and hide them. If the kids see it, they’ll want to do the project now. You need it to be a surprise for the kids just when they (and you) need it most. Peruse the craft store ads for art projects that your kids might like and pick them up when they’re on sale. Think about your child’s special interests. Maybe there’s a project related to them? Remember things you made when you were a kid. Here are a few ideas to get you started.

Get something made from unfinished wood at your local craft store. It can be small, like a bird house or a shelf, or larger, like a stepstool or a small wooden bench. The craft stores usually keep them in the back of the store. Next you need something that the kids can use to decorate them – crayons, paints, whatever. Last, you need clear spray-on paint to seal it. When the time is right, get out the newspaper and the supplies and let the kids decorate their own brand-new whatever. You seal it with the clear paint later and it’s a great addition to their room.

You could do something similar with ceramics. There are a lot of shops where kids can decorate a bowl or knick knack. If you’re prepared with all the materials, you can do the same thing at home.

Make a scavenger hunt. This will take some time on your part, but imagine how much fun the kids will have when you send them on a long scavenger hunt.  You can create one from scratch if you like. If you’re short on time or creative energy, there’s a great product called Riddle Me that you can download for $20. It lists many items that are commonly found in homes. You just check the ones that you want to use and it prints out the clues. You have to go through the house hiding clues for the kids to find, but they make it pretty easy by telling you where each clue should be hidden.

Oriental Trading Company has a craft division. You can order little craft kids that have everything you need. The only problem is that you usually have to order 12 kits at a time. You could also look at their website to find ideas and put the kits together yourself.

This isn’t really a craft, but it’s a great idea. Get a building toy, like K’nex, Marble Run or Erector. Keep it hidden away and bring it out only on those ‘special’ days. That way it won’t get boring.

If you get a few of these things ready, you’ll be able to pull something new and great out at that moment when the kids are bored out of their minds and you’re going crazy.

November 19, 2009

Free Audio Books Online

A while back I wrote about audio books available – for free – from the Orange County Public Library. At the time there were many books, including popular titles, that could be downloaded to your computer. Stephanie Meyers popular Twilight series, The Cat in the Hat and Eragon were among them. There were fewer books that you could download to your iPod or burn to a CD.

Well, it seems that the list of iPod accessible downloads is growing. The library now carries Stephanie Meyers’ new book The Host, James Patterson’s The Quickie, and The Jury by Fern Michaels, in a format that you can download to your iPod.  All for free. If well known authors are making some of their books available in this format, maybe more authors and publishers will follow suit.

You can also get many, many classic books in a format that you can download to your iPod or burn to a cd. In fact, here’s a list of 100 Free Audio Books – classics all.

Should you switch to audio books? Well, maybe not entirely. Everyone should learn how to read the written word. But there are a lot of times when an audio book would be a good idea, or maybe just a change of pace. What about the high school student who is an auditory learner, dragging himself through Moby Dick? What about an older reader who has trouble with small print size? What about something different for the kids for a long car ride?

If you live in Orange County, California you can get free audio books online at the library’s website. If you already have a library card, you don’t even need to go to the library. Here’s a summary of how to set it up. If you live in another county, check with your local library. Many are offering similar services. If your library doesn’t offer free audio books online, try LibriVox.

Happy Listening!

November 17, 2009

Great Kids Party Game

Filed under: Free Activities, Party Games — Tags: — admin @ 4:17 pm

Got a large group of kids? Looking for something fun but inexpensive to do? Try this great party game.

Gather at a large place with lots of people. A mall is ideal. Kids are divided into two or more teams. If the kids are young, each team needs to have a couple of parents to supervise. Each team has a list of parents to find.

The challenge: the parents will be in disguise. Use your imagination to blend in with the crowd. You need to look like a real person – just not yourself.

As teams find disguised parents, they collect their signatures. At the end of the allotted time, the team with the most signatures wins.

This game is great for kids of any age. In fact, you could have teenagers disguise themselves to fool the participants. If the searchers don’t know the hiders well, you could provide photos of how they normally look. Use your imagination and have fun!

Mom? Is that you?

Mom? Is that you?

That's My Dad!

That's My Dad!

October 28, 2009

Rainy Day Activities

Winter is coming, and you know what that means. Restless, cooped up kids are going to drive you crazy. Everyone needs to get out of the house – kids and adults alike. But it’s cold and rainy out. What is there to do? Well, here are some ideas of things to do on a rainy day.

Ice Skating. Don’t hide from winter, embrace it! Get out the mittens, scarves and jackets and go ice skating. Kids will get the wiggles out and you’ll get some exercise. And when you get home you’ll enjoy how warm your house is! You might be surprised to learn that there are quite a few Orange County Ice Skating Rinks – both indoors and outdoors.

The Mall. When the going gets tough, the tough go shopping. You don’t actually have to buy anything. Local indoor malls have carousels, play equipment and more. Young ones will love wandering through the Disney Store. Older kids might go shopping for clothes. After all, now that the weather is getting cooler, they might need more long pants or a new jacket.

Make Tents. Let the kids turn your house, or at least a part of it, into a tent city. Get out extra sheets, blankets and towels. The kids can drape them over chairs and tables to make a cool indoor tent. Flashlights and books are a must!

Brave the Outdoors. I know you’re trying to avoid the wet weather, but every now and again you should just take it head on. Take the little ones on an Umbrella Walk or a Puddle Promenade. Pick up some rain boots at the local thrift store or Target. Older children can build a small fort with several umbrellas. And my kids cannot recommend Snail Races highly enough. Kids collect snails and release them into the water flowing down the gutter.

Theme Park. At least once this winter, you should hit up a theme park in the rain. The lines are non-existent and laughter is guaranteed. Just pack dry clothes (and slippers!) in the car for the ride home. Pack a thermos of hot chocolate as a special treat to help thaw everyone out when you get back to the car.

Bowling. Kids love bowling, and everyone from little to big can play together. If you’re willing to spend a little money at the snack bar, kids would love getting french fries or nachos to bring back to eat right at your lane. Here’s a list of Orange County Bowling Alleys.

Cook. Yes, I know that cooking sounds like a chore to you, but the kids will love it. They can bake cookies or a cake. You can have them choose something to make for dinner. In fact, they can make up a grocery list and you can take them to the store to do their shopping for dinner. You might even get your regular shopping done while you’re there. Are there any achievements in their scout books about shopping or cooking? What about preparing for those evenings when everyone is going different directions at dinnertime? Have the kids make burritos or little pizzas and freeze them for those get-it-yourself dinner nights. If you want to get a group of kids together, but you don’t want to offer up your kitchen, there are cooking schools for kids that will host a group activity.

Go to the Gym. No, not 24 Hour Fitness. Sorry. Most kids’ gymnasiums offer open gym time or group parties, even if you’re not signed up for a regular class. Kids can tumble on the (indoor) equipment, learn somersaults, even jump on trampolines. Check out places that offer gymnastics for kids in Orange County.

Go to a Museum. There are tons of museums just for kids. Discovery Science Center is always popular. Or how about the new Pretend City in Irvine? There are museums to discover wildlife, dress-up, history or art.

Crafts Project. Make a gingerbread house, finger paintings or macaroni necklaces. You can keep it simple and just bring out the art supplies you have and let the kids exercise their imaginations. Or you can make a whole day of it by going to the craft store and picking out a big project that everyone can do together. A more expensive but less messy (for you) option is to take them to a ceramics place where they can decorate their masterpiece and bring it home.

Go to a Pet Store. Check out Omar’s Birds, Prehistoric Pets or just the local pet store near you. There’s even a pet store in Orange called Wagon Train Feed & Tack that specializes in farm animals – baby farm animals.

Indoor Bounce House. There are many places that have a variety of bounce houses set up indoors. They mostly cater to birthday parties, but some of them offer an open playtime too.

With all the fun things for kids to do, you and your kids will be looking forward to the next rainy day!

October 11, 2009

Haunted Attractions in Orange County

Do your kids love Halloween? Do they like to be scared? Throughout October there are lots of opportunities for frights and fun. These are mostly geared towards older kids and teenagers – kids who don’t mind having a ghoul jump out and scare them when they don’t expect it. Some are scarier than others, and most have a recommended age.

Some organizations set up a haunted something either in a home or in a retail space. They all have a theme, which changes each year. Do clowns scare you? What about a maze and characters based on Silent Hill?  There are some very creative people out there ready to scare you to pieces!

Some historical societies are taking advantage of Orange County’s rich history. You can go on a tour of a historic neighborhood or forest, with the tour leader sharing local ghost stories along the way. San Juan Capistrano does a great haunted Halloween tour of Los Rios Street, and groups are small enough that the tour leader can adjust the scariness level to the age of the group. Fullerton Arboretum hosts a tour through a haunted forest, led by a vampire.

The granddaddy of all Orange County Halloween activities is Knott’s Scary Farm. It’s pricier than the others, but you get the rides as well as the Halloween frights.  Ghouls will jump out and scare you as you make your way through the scary mazes.

One of the best things about these haunted houses is that each one is unique. You could go to one each weekend and have a different experience each time. Check out the listing of the Haunted Houses in Orange County.

October 1, 2009

Tippity Witchit’s Hallowe’en

Filed under: Cool Stuff, Family Activities, Free Activities — Tags: , — admin @ 8:00 am

This is one of my favorite stories ever. It was written by Olive Beaupre Miller and published in the 1920s as part of a collection of stories called My Book House. I believe that the copyright has expired. At the end of this post, there is a pdf version of the story, so you can print it out if you like. I hope you enjoy this story as much as I always have.

********************************************************************************

tw1Two round, yellow eyes glowed like little lanterns in the darkness of the barn. Those eyes belonged to a kitten by the name of Tippity Witchit. He was all jet black except for a tiny white spot on the very tip of his tail and he lay curled up in the straw with his mother, a nice yellow Tabby, and all his brothers and sisters. His eyes were still wide open while all the rest were asleep, because he was very angry. “I want to leave you, Mother, to go out and see the world.” That’s what he had said that day.

But his mother had said: “My darling, you are still a very small kitten. When you have grown somewhat older, you shall go out and see the world.”

Tippity Witchit sulked. The idea of telling him he was only a little kitten! Giving himself a shake, he got up from the straw. He was as big as the next cat and able to meet all adventures that might befall the cat tribe – anywhere in the world! Sneaking off to the door, he slipped across the barnyard and out on the long stretch of highway that ran to the wide, wide world. Oh, what a moon was shining! It turned all the fields to silver. And little mists were rising shimmering over the meadows. He was out in a white world of moonlight with little black shadows dancing here and there on the edges. He was out like a great big cat in the mystery of the night!

tw21

Strutting along on his way, shivering a little with cold, for the time was late October, he saw a field where the cornstalks stood piled up in stacks like tepees of the Indians with yellow pumpkins lying all around them on the ground. The whole field swam in moonlight. It glittered and it glistened! Tippity Witchit leapt! He bounced on down the road half-bursting with delight.

tw3aBut then he saw something different. He passed a dried up garden and there stood a wild-looking scarecrow, wearing an old felt hat and an old black suit of man’s clothes. That scarecrow certainly gave young Tippity Witchit a start! He quieted down in an instant. But he said to himself very boldly: “I’m a big cat, I am! I’m not afraid of a thing in all the whole, wide world!”

Just the same, he trembled when he came to the very next cornfield. The corn here had not been cut; it stood in ghostly rows, like a bank of withered old witches. Its long dried leaves hung down like ghostly withered old arms, its tassels streamed out every which way like straggly hair on a hag. “I’m not afraid of a thing,” he had to repeat to himself.

tw4

But as Tippity Witchit was looking, he thought he heard a low chuckle. A little light appeared, dancing over a meadow. Here, there, and nowhere, it went!

tw5“Hey, there, Will-o’-the-Wisp!” he certainly heard a chorus of shrill little bell-like voices call to that impish light. And the silver mists on the fields all of a sudden seemed to have millions of bright little eyes. There were sprites there laughing in the moonlight! Their filmy, long, white robes went trailing, curling, swirling.

And the mischievous little light that was the Will-o’-the-Wisp, began to dance with the mist sprites. Hide and seek, they played till all the world seemed alive and full of strange little chuckles. Tippity Witchit chuckled and began to dance himself.

tw6Then Tippity Witchit heard above those chuckles a cackling, a queer kind of cackling laughter like the cackles of old Biddy Hen. And, up there against the face of the big round silver moon, he saw a black figure sailing – an old lady with a tall peaked hat and a black robe floating behind her, riding along on a broomstick and stroking a huge, black cat. She sailed right across the sky; and behind her – there came in perfect triangular formation – a bevy of big, black bats soaring on big, black wings.

tw7aThe Old Witch came circling and circling, lower and lower and lower, till she landed right in the field before that hag-like row of shriveled old corn witches. And, the squadron of big black bats, breaking their orderly ranks, flew and fluttered about in a dusky cloud overhead.

“Land of living kittens!” Tippity Witchit cried, “Life is exciting at last!”

Cackling and cackling and cackling, the Old Witch waved her broomstick and that row of old corn witches suddenly came to life. They began to rustle a little and then to crackle and snap! They waved their long, withered arms and danced in their even rows in a kind of drill like soldiers. Their arms moved back and forth; they swayed on their long, thin bodies; their hair streamed out in the wind; and they rustled and crackled and snapped.

tw8

“Miaow, miaow, miaow!” went the old Witch’s big black cat. Then hundreds of other black cats came running out of the shadows. They all began to dance, miaowing and caterwauling and making a hideous din.

“Here’s something to brag about!” Tippity Witchit cried. “Won’t I tell a good story when I get home again!”

But, just at that moment, Old Mother Witch looked down in the moonlight and spied young Tippity Witchit.

“Cack, cack, cack!” she laughed. “You’re a nice young Thomas Cat, and the proper color for me! I’ve only to wave my broomstick and make you my cat forever like all these other black cats. Then you can follow me out in the wide, wide world and frolic and dance in the moonlight till the very last end of time.”

Well, Tippity Witchit went cold and yet he was all on fire! He tingled and trembled and shivered. He wanted to join that mad throng.

“Ah, but!” said Old Mother Witch. “I see a white spot on your tail. You can never be my cat until you are, tip to nose, as black as they sky at midnight!”

Tippity crumpled up. To lose such fun for a white spot!

tw9a“Never mind, young cat. I’ll remedy that spot.” Old Mother Witch waved her broomstick; and, in a second of time, who came shambling along up the road, but the scarecrow out of the garden with a few little carrots and turnips gamboling along at his heels.  He was swinging his long, empty sleeves and shuffling his great big feet! The limp, black legs of his pants were bending at very odd places! His black hat was jammed so far down it sat on top of his shoulders! Wild little wisps of straw-stuffing stuck out in crazy fashion! And one of his handless arms held an old watering-pot.

“Get me some ink from the shadows.” Old Mother Witch called out, and the scarecrow gave one great dive into the deepest shadow. Tippity Witchit could see the blackness of night like black water pour in a smooth black stream, as out of some unseen faucet, into the watering-pot.

“Sprinkle it now on the white spot on the tail of this Thomas Cat,” Old Mother Witch commanded. The scarecrow had lifted the pot and was just on the very point of pouring the ink on the white spot when, all at once, Tippity Witchit heard a miaowing and running. Something came leaping and bounding, hurrying up the road. Jerking around in surprise, Tippity Witchit saw his mother come running toward him.  The ink, pouring out as he turned, missed the spot on his tail and smeared in a big black shadow out on the ground beside him.

“Tipity Witchint, don’t!” his mother screeched in terror.  “Keep that white spot on your tail. It’s Hallowe’en, my child! If the Old Witch gets you tonight, you’ll never come home again.” Before she could say any more the Old Witch raised her broomstick. She flourished it in the air, and Tippity Witchit’s mother was suddenly turned to china. A fine, yellow china cat shining there in the moonlight, she stood – unable to move, unable to speak a word – frozen in the very act of leaping along the road. She looked like a beautiful ornament for somebody’s mantlepiece.

tw10

“Miaow! Aow! Aow!” Tippity Witchit’s heart was smitten for a moment! His mother! His poor mother! But the dance was so very enticing! He wanted to caper and leap, to dance with that crazy crowd.

“Pour it on now,” said the Witch.

Tippity Witchit felt creepy. His mother! His poor mother! He wished and yet he feared. Well, he was a grown-up cat! “I don’t rush into things!” he threw out his chest a little. “I’ll just think the matter over!”

tw11

“Cack, cack, cack,” laughed the Witch. “Then come along with me, and see what you shall see and think what you shall think.” She took him up on her broomstick and oh, what a thrill was that! They soared up into the air and off to a neighboring cornfield. Breathless, Tippity Witchit clutched with all four feet the handle of that old broomstick. Such a ride as that he had never had in his life!

tw12

They circled over the field and Tipity saw below the corn stacked up in piles with pumpkins lying about as big and round as the moon. And the crazy cats and the scarecrows and the little carrots and turnips cam gamboling through the cornstalks. Down dived the witch with a zip, alighting on the ground. Pumpkins lay all around. She flourished her magic broomstick and all at once those pumpkins suddenly started to grim. They had eyes! They had mouths! They had noses! They had little lights shining in them! Turned into jack-o-lanterns, they started to gambol, too; and the lights in their little heads went glimmering here and there, roguishly winking and blinking.

tw13

“Hey there, merry fellows,” Tippity Witchit managed to get enough courage to shout.

Again the Old Witch raised her broomstick and this time the stack of corn turned into Indian tepees. Before each tepee, there sat a ghostly old Indian brave. Made of thin air were those braves! They had no more real body than the filmiest kind of night clouds. Serious, grave, and stately, they sat and they smoked and they smoked! And the smoke from their long Indian pipes rolled out and lost itself in the white mist over the cornfields. They sat and they smoked and they smoked and they watched the mad dance going on.

tw14

The will-o’-the-wisps came flickering. They drew up their flames long and lean. They leapt up into the air. Whisk! They were gone altogether! The eyes of the mist sprites glittered. They trailed their white skirts and they gamboled. The jack-o-lanterns frolicked, grinning and winking their lights. The little carrots and turnips broke away from the scarecrow and tumbled with headlong somersaults into the merry-making. A thousand little, dried leaves blew in like crazy things – zipping and flipping and fluttering. The corn witches swayed themselves forward as far as they could reach on their long, thin, shriveled bodies. Old Mother Witch left her broomstick and whirled around with the scarecrow! The cats danced in crazy couples; the bats sailed, dipped, and fluttered in wild antics overhead. All the world seemed to twitter, to chuckle and cackle and snap. And above that whole merry scene, the old Moon laughed till he cried, his tears coming down to the earth in a shower of silver moonbeams.

tw15

“This is the life for a cat!” Tippity Witchit miaowed. Would he pay too big a price if he gave himself up forever to follow Old Mother Witch? What dancing! Oh, what dancing! A hundred times, he was tempted. He followed new here, now there, the revel of those crazy madcaps. A hundred times, as he watched, the scarecrow dashed from the dancing at Old Mother Witch’s command to chase after Tippity Witchit and sprinkle the ink on his tail.

But there was, by chance, one thing that Old Mother Witch had forgotten when she turned Mother Cat into china. She had frozen the pleading and begging in Mother Cat’s pleading eyes into a fixed expression. So, wherever Tippity Witchit went in that wild night’s wild wanderings, his mother’s eyes shone on him, begging, pleading, imploring. That look kept just one little, small grain of sense alive in the head of the giddy cat child. Mother Cat couldn’t talk, but still she could speak with her eyes. And so, every time the scarecrow stole up on Tippity Witchit, Tippity Witchit whisked off and out of the scarecrow’s reach.

For hours and hours and hours, the dance went on in the moonlight. And then the Old Witch got impatient. The more that little black cat kept himself out of her clutches, the more determined she grew that she would get him for keeps. And so, at last, she cackled to a sleek little back girl kitten: “Go and ask that standoffish young Thomas Cat to dance!”

tw16aAnd the sleek, little, black girl kitten came and miaowed very sweetly: “O won’t you dance with me?”

Well, Tippity Witchit just couldn’t say “no” to an offer like that. He gave up resisting completely and went waltzing off with the girl cat, out in the midst of the frolic. He whirled and he whirled and he whirled, until he was dizzy with whirling. Life was a merry-go-round, a jolly old whirligig! At last he fell down on the ground, his thoughts all whirling inside him. And now he was far out of reach of his mother’s imploring eyes. The last grain of sense he had disappeared in a buzzing and whizzing. The little girl cat gave a giggle and made a sign to the scarecrow. The scarecrow came up with his inkpot; Old Mother Witch stood cackling, ready to raise her broomstick, and Tippity Witchit’s last hour as a nice, homey, family cat with the love of his mother to cheer him, seemed, alas, to have struck. But just at that moment, “Oh! Ah! Ah! Oh!” a shriek burst from Old Mother Witch. The sky in the East showed pink and the moon dipped suddenly down over the edge of the world. Dawn, the dawn was coming! The sun sent a warning beam!

In an instant that mad world changed. Tippity Witchit came to and opened one eye to see it.

The leaves flopped down and lay still, so did the carrots and turnips. The will-o’-the-wisps and mist sprites disappeared as by magic! The bats flew off in a twinkling! The old Indian braves at their smoking vanished into thin air, their tepees were stacks of corn; the jack-o-lanterns were pumpkins! The scarecrow flew back to his garden to be nothing more than a scarecrow! The ghostly old corn witches were only rows of dried corn. And Old Mother Witch, what a change! She turned into a spider – hurrying, hurrying, hurrying to roof herself over with cobwebs and hide close down to the earth. The black cats turned into ants and scurried away at a great rate. And that was the end, for a year,  of that madcap Hallowe’en revel! Only one night a year to gambol in the moonlight. All the rest of time to be nothing more than an ant! Tippity Witchit shivered! What had had escaped!

tw17a“Miaow! Miaow!” he began to call for his mother. And, at that moment, flash! A sunbeam struck Mother Cat. In one brilliant sparkle of light, Mother Cat was released from the spell that bound her in china. She sprang up high in the air. Then she leapt up to Tippity Witchit and took him by his ear. “Now, we’ll go home,” she said, “and don’t you go wandering again until you are really as big as you thought yourself tonight!”

And Tippity Witchit said, “Miaow!” But what he meant by that, you will have to guess for yourself.

tippity-witchit

September 23, 2009

Kids Gym has moved to Capistrano Beach

A cooking class for 5 year olds? Basketball and hockey for 4 year olds? A science class for 3 year olds? Yep! Kids Gym lets the young ones do all these fun things and more. Classes are geared toward the preschool set, who like to get their hands dirty!

doughy-handsThese classes are for kids and their parents, and a good time will be had by all. The cooking class helps kids build math, science and thinking skills.  They’ll mix, shake, stir, and blend to create delicious, messy munchies to share. Did I mention messy? The Messy Art class involves – you guessed it – hands on projects like fingerpainting. I think a theme is beginning to emerge!

Kids Gym also offers drop in child care on selected days and evenings so that parents can get away for a little while, knowing that their kids are having a blast.

Want more Kids Gym? Preschool is offered two, three or five days a week.

Kids Gym has recently moved from Rancho Santa Margarita to Capistrano Beach. Visit their website or stop by and see their new digs!

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