Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Girded

Tree retrieved from garage rafters by long-armed Child balancing precariously on chair and resting said tree on head of its sibling helper

Decorations finally run to earth in bin (after Children insisted they were nowhere to be found - bin had been misleadingly labeled "Christmas")

Egg nog poured into festive martini glasses and drunk

Crackers pulled, Male Child mocked for finding a lipstick case in its cracker, stupid jokes read and appreciated, paper crowns donned

Child 1 ensconced on couch due to exhaustion and allowed to dole out decorations to the decorators

Ornaments held up and admired, stories told about places of acquisition, favorites chosen and extolled for their virtues (I still love our moose snowflake and the white heron that bobbles its head)

Usual ponderance on why we keep: 1 scrunched paper ball with red and green dots drawn on (creation of Child 1), 1 key chain with cheap aluminium soccer ball on, one clay representation of a dog, missing two limbs and carefully painted with red fingernail polish. Said "ornaments" are then placed on the tree anyway

This year's ornament, small pottery blue bird in honor of the dozens of jays we see on our hikes, carefully hung to best effect.

Irritating tin "icicle" tinsel thingies retrieved from box and hung on tree where they will only stay for fifteen minutes before leaping off and spreading over the entire house

Effort to decipher pre-lit light plug system which results in bottom tier of lights working beautifully while rest of tree remains firmly dark. Looks a little like the tree is wearing a lace petticoat. Pre-lit lights abandoned.

Multi-colored light strand artistically arranged by Child 3 to wind up tree like a garland. Effect is remarkably attractive and Child 3 is lauded for its efforts. Child 3 will spend next three days un-winding and re-winding lights

Decorators, still adorned with paper crowns, collapse on soft surfaces to lap up more egg nog and bask in the beauty of their efforts. Dr Who episodes put on to provide ambiance (because nothing says tree-decorating-day like two hours of creepy little kids in gas masks cooing, "are you my mummy?")

Okay holidays, I think we're ready for you.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Took a bit but the tree is now up and twinkling. Odd though. Several ornaments are missing their hanging mechanisms - the little springy loop that the curly q goes through. I don't recall ever having this problem before.

We haven't found this year's ornament yet. Still looking. There's a crafts fair today so maybe something special will pop up.

No icicles. The cats eat them and for the next two months I end up chasing the cat arounds the house with a paper towel trying to get the tinsel and the dangling poop off their butt.

Anonymous said...

...sounds quite delightful!

Megan said...

Anon(1) - my mother used to carefully save the tinsel and reuse it year to year. I didn't know tinsel was meant to be long and straight for years - thought everyone had slightly crumpled wads of silvery stuff that were wedged into any empty spaces on the tree! Our "tinsel" is actually twisted bits of tin that are supposed to hook over the branches. It's a nice idea - sort of old-fashioned and eco-friendly and all of that except the hooky things won't stay hooked no matter how firmly you wrap it 'round. I picked up seven of the darn things yesterday and have no doubt the same number will be on the floor when I get home. So the question is, why exactly do I keep trying with these things year after year? I suppose it's just one more incomprehensible tradition!

Anon(2) it was actually - as was this weekend with St Nich's day. Mmmmmm... chocolate coins...

Anonymous said...

the delightful comment was sarcastically directed at anon1's cat poo comment.

and yes, chocolate coins are delicious!!