Saturday, February 18, 2012

A week at home...

"Normally" (for Qatar) you would leave the country if you had a decent break from work or school.  We have decided to stay in Qatar for our shorter breaks primarily because Teagan LOVES just being at home.  


The week had quite a few activities in it.  For me: de cluttering (I do hate shifting house so if I am permanently low on extra items then surely I will be problem free at some point in the future), and rejigging the my active company (of which, I am the Director, oh, yes, the only employee so also the tea lady and general dogsbody). For Teagan, it had a set of "challenges", copious amounts of art, sleep overs / play dates.  


The company is quite a chunk of work.  For the properties, the week has been challenged with balancing the increasing rental market with improvements.  We are putting down new carpet and repainting the interior of the central auckland property.  I have been choosing carpets (demanding 100% wool, thankyou very much) using swatches on-line.  Our property manager is just fabulous and so in touch with the central auckland relocation/executive market that it does make choices a bit easier.  And then, as usual, I have been burying myself in spreadsheets and interim company reports as the reporting season opens.  Not to be forgotten, the NZ tax year finishes at the end of March so I dread the pulling together of material for the accountant and off it all goes to our friendly IRD for the NZ properties.


Ross and I have been at a wits end on what to do with "The Kid".  Living away from close friends and family means you loose the wisdom of those who have tread there before you.  It seems we lost the instruction manual geared towards 6 & 7 year olds and we have vague memories of Nigel Latta's, Politically Incorrect Parenting Show.  I am sure that Nanny 911 would be proud of us as we combine the negative reinforcement with the positive reinforcement but in reality, the only success we get is from the negative angle; Teagan seems to be fairly well self-motivated so she just gets on with doing it herself.  Money, praise, outings etc make little difference to her drive; that said, challenges do work for a visible reward.  We now have a girl that can tie her own shoelaces!


Safety in cars has been a constant battle for us.  Teagan remains a small but proportionally balanced child; technically this means she is best in a 5 point harness.  We did move her into a lap sash belt in a full backed booster in our car and two weeks ago she graduated out of the "baby seat" in Claudio's car.  She now weighs in at a tad over 16 kg and has successfully grown out of many of her clothes including casual footwear.  So we have a big girl in our midst wearing her lap sash belt and wearing some new clothes!


During the week I managed to finalise many of our travel details for the next six months.  Italy has been prepared featuring (only) Rome, Pompeii, Capris and the Amalfi Coast.  And New Zealand is a near repeat of last year with a final week in Mooloolaba, Sunshine Coast Australia.  Thankfully we have time now to recover the credit card from its state of airfare decimation!


Then on to the quiet times.  Knitting has been prevalent in the house along with some historical documentaries.  I am forever thankful that I persisted with learning the continental knitting method as my (well actually Teagan's) current fairisle design is progressing rapidly.  That said, I am not sure if the colours are the ones I would have chosen - but I am not the designer!  I think progress has  also been fast as Ross and I are embedded in a BBC series called "Empire of the Seas".  Surely, we must be becoming experts in some areas of world history!  


So now, it is on and off.  A chicken roast dinner calls and I think whilst doing that I may reproduce one of the recipes found within a Thinking-outside-the-lunch-box article featuring a very dear family friend preparing school lunches with her three delightful children.










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