6TZEN…

As we were leaving the Chambly Fort yesterday some bikes caught our eyes…

6TZEN Tandem biking across America

I asked if I could take pictures and then we started to talk to the family…

Last month in June this beautiful family of six arrived from Normandy and started on a 10 month journey that started in Quebec city and will end in South America. Each bike holds 3 people and all of them can peddle except for the youngest.

The largest bike in front holds Noé who is four, Arnaud (Dad), and Nathanaël, 11.
The other bike has Gabriel (9), Mom (Estelle) and 2 year old Eva…

They try to bike at least 30km a day and they never know where they will be sleeping that night. I wish we would have lived closer, or at least in the direction that they were headed so that we could have had them over and been able to talk more…

What a beautiful Family and amazing journey they are taking…

6TZEN Tandem biking across America

Though their site is French, please check them out at 6TZEN.org

There is a link to their blog (in the section “SUIVEZ NOS GUIDONS”) and Maybe if you keep a tab on their journey and they pass near you you might be able to send them a message and offer them a place to stay for the night 🙂

Fort de Chambly

Yesterday we met up with some old friends that were on vacation here from France. We spent the day with them on Wednesday also but they are leaving tonight so we were really happy to be able to see them and their kids again.

We decided to head to the “Fort de Chambly” which is about 50 min away…

Fort de Chambly

The first Fort was built in 1665 as one of the French outposts to protect New France against raids of the Iroquois. It was burned down by the Iroquois in 1703 and then reconstructed soon after. After the war against the Iroquois was over, it was ordered rebuilt in stone to protect again the English. In 1711 it was finished and though it was restored in the 1980’s this is the fort that stands today.

Fort de Chambly Fort de Chambly

Fort de Chambly

We walked around and watched the Rapids a bit… The fort stands on the Richelieu River which was know at the time as the Iroquois River.

Watching the Rapids with friends
The kids had fun looking for squirrels…

Squirrel hunters

In the courtyard, stones in the ground show where the original buildings were from the earlier structures and wood stump outline the old walls that were made of wood…

Courtyard

Here you see the line in the wall that shows the old wall before the restoration.

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The site has been excavated and here we see the original building and the Latrines. These latrines were actually quite luxurious as all the waste went right into the underground natural channels that led to the river. Quite a few artifacts were found in the latrines when they excavated the grounds. The theory is that when the English conquered the fort they threw many of the French items “out with the waste.”

Excacations/Latrines

This room was very dungeon like. It was where the gunpowder was kept.

Where the gun powder was stored

A painting in the Museum shows Montreal in the 1700’s

Montreal in the 18th Century

We went through the museum and at the end there was a place for the kids to try on Costumes and become Soldiers… they got dressed up and played out stories and headed up to the the turret… they would have stayed there for hours if they could…

Xavier said that he was not a soldier but was a captain. He here is looking out on the courtyard…

Captain Xavier

Walking the halls…

Capitain Xavier

Soldier Colin coming down from the turret…. he saved the fort from the Indians… see how proud he is 🙂

Colin

It turned out to be a beautiful day and we had a great time with friends and learning about Quebec history…

(here is the turret they played in… )

Fort de Chambly

Why UC?

Giving birth unassisted, having an unassisted pregnancy and labour is a decision that can be hard to make, and many women have their own reasons for doing so.

Some women have their first babies unassisted, for some it is after many births, for some it for religious reasons and for some it is the only choice, for many it is their past experiences that bring them to the decision.

For me, the reason has evolved.

My labour with Xavier was far from perfect, he was posterior and after 38 hours of labour at the birthing centre I was transfered being only 3cm. I was given an epidural, a pit drip and a catheter. I was poked and prodded and checked too often by complete strangers that could have been a random person waking the hallways. I was told that I would need a c/s, that the baby was too big, that my pelvis was too small, that I could never give birth, that the baby was in peril when it was the monitor that kept slipping, my water was broken “accidentally” and an internal monitor was placed on Xavier’s head. I was asked why I didn’t want to hold my baby, and told that there was virtually no risk with a c-section…

I was then  given a deadline that after which I would have “no choice”.

I was then left alone… until a few minutes before the deadline when the doctor came to see if I had progressed… with one gloved hand she went to check and his head was already half way out… they screamed at me not to push and he was born as they were still scrambling to get ready.

After being in labour for 49 hours, I left the hospital 2 hours later and vowed never to go back.

With Colin, I was almost ready to give birth unassisted if labour had come differently, though in hindsight, I don’t think I would have been that prepared.  I knew though, that it would take at least 3 hours to get to the birthing centre because Simon doesn’t drive and it wouldn’t be right to drive in labour, which meant I would have to wait for a friend to come get me from Montreal, and then bring me back to Montreal. As it happened though, my water broke and it allowed me the time to get to the birthing centre without too much labouring on the road.

Another posterior baby, another long labour, and the stress that I would have to birth in one of the offices downstairs because of the centre’s policy of weight limitations for birthing upstairs where the birthing rooms where (a policy that was abolished soon after)…

I was brought downstairs at one point when labour was strong and my body just didn’t want to labour anymore…   and then the threats of a transfer started to come around. In the morning, my midwife went to rest a bit and another midwife came in and started to talk to me. I was breaking down, I didn’t want to birth downstairs during office hours, I didn’t want to be transfered, I just wanted to give birth the way I knew I could.

The new midwife talked to me, she gave me my confidence back, she gave me new ideas and positions that may help turn him, she asked me what “I” needed, (which was to rest), and then she helped me get into a better position so that I could rest as I hadn’t slept all night… I was able to sleep between contractions, through transition and I even had the courage to tell another midwife to leave me alone…  and when they came to see if things had progressed, as I turned over, Colin turned and was ready to come out. He was born a few minutes later, after 22 hours of labour.  A student midwife that was there put tension on the cord and I started to hemorrhage, something that could have easily been avoided if she hadn’t been there or would have just let things alone, I left there with angry at the centre and their policies and time limits, and at people who didn’t really help me, but instead hindered the whole process and even created problems.

18 months later, I was pregnant again. My first reflex was to call the birthing centre. I gave my info on the phone and because I had already given birth there I would usually be in right away.  I was told however, that they wouldn’t take me because of the distance and told me to call another birthing centre the same distance from me but in the opposite direction. I panicked for a bit, I did call the other birthing centre, but I also felt a great bit of relief.

I told Simon that I would rather UC this time, being refused a place again because of policy was what gave me the nudge. But, my journey began and there was no turning back and though I did get into another birthing centre, I declined when I got called and told them that I had made my choice to UC.

Though it was policy that pushed me, my reasons for UC changed quite quickly.

The relief  that I felt when I was told that I didn’t have a space was because I knew that the birthing centre was no longer for me. That there was too much intervention even in that setting. That I would be better birthing unhindered… unobserved. I had understood that my body shuts down when I am nervous and the presence of doctors or midwives, schedules and expectations makes that happen.

My choice to UC is because I believe that the safest place for my child to be born in at home unhindered, that the safest place for me to have a child is at home. I believe that my body functions best when I am able to go into myself and work with my body to give birth in the best and easiest way possible. I feel confident that birth is a natural process that when intervened with only causes more problems than it is supposed to help.

My UC with Khéna was the fastest and easiest birth I have had and the biggest baby I have had, I was able to go inside myself and go through labour  and birth in the way that I needed and there is no question that I would not birth in the same way way again…

He's 7!!!

Man, time flies by… but then again, it feels like we have had him around for an eternity.

7 years ago yesterday I gave birth to my first son. A long labour, a transfer, a lot of fighting against the “professionals” and he was born quickly when he decided that he was ready…

Pretty much sums up our life with him now 🙂

Here he is at 22 hours old…

xavier 22 hours old

Xavier was born awake and alert he has always looked a bit older than he was.  He was not a napper from day one and resisted  sleep in the day but slept very well at night and hasn’t changed.

He was fast at physical things like sitting and crawling and was walking at 9 months but he was slow when it came to talking though he had no problem communicating. He has always been a bit different from other kids… he wouldn’t let us read stories to him and would cry when we sang songs…

~9 months~

Xavier 9 months

At just over 2 he became a big brother for the first time and the first thing he did when we all got home was hit Colin over the head with a toy car… It was a foundation for their relationship 😉

Xavier and Colin

Then,  just over 2 years later, he became a big brother again…

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It is amazing to see how much Xavier has grown and who he is becoming.

He has so much spirit and can be exhausting at times and the most amazing help at others. He is funny and is becoming a real joker and loves making his brothers laugh. He is a perfectionist and needs to know that he can do something before showing us that he can so there are many things that he can do that we are only discovering.

Xavier has an amazing memory for names and details, it surprises us each day the things he can remember. He remembers things from years ago and talks about them like they were yesterday, details and names of characters from movies and games etc.

He loves Star Wars and Dungeons & Dragons and has been really into computer games and starting to role play D&D games with Colin and Simon. At the moment he also loves to swim and is now starting to swim under the water and getting things on the floor of the pool. His abilities have progressed so quickly over a few weeks… at the beginning of the summer he didn’t even want to put his head under and now he is diving and swimming all the way down!

Xavier underwater

Xavier and Colin came back from the cabin on Wednesday evening and we had supper and then did his cake…

chocolate… his favourite!

Happy 7th Birthday Xavier!!!

Happy 7th Birthday Xavier!!!

Then yesterday we woke up early and went out for breakfast and then went on a shopping spree for a few toys… Star wars toys were the main choice along with a floating toy for the pool…  Then we grabbed some lunch and headed home where we gave him the “big gift”… Actually, both Colin and Xavier got one because of the great deal I got on the a few months back….

They got the AT-TE they wanted!!

Both of them were really happy 🙂

They got the AT-TE they wanted!!

Wow…. 7 years old… Happy Birthday Kid!!!

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wow… the house is quiet…

My mom came over last night and left early this morning with Xavier and Colin to head to the cabin for 2 nights… they were so excited to leave! Xavier even wanted to sleep in the clothes that he would be wearing today so that he didn’t have to get dressed in the morning… We got up and the boys came upstairs to wake up my mom and after a quick breakfast and a shower for my mom, they were gone…

The house is so quiet though and I can see that Khéna is feeling a bit bored not having his brothers around to play with, follow around and bug…

When I told my mom that I am expecting, she extended the date she was going to be leaving from the end of July to the beginning of October and she would like to take the boys a few times before she leaves. Honestly, I think that it will be nice once in while. The cabin is a really nice place to hang out at and they plan on heading to the local beach and heading to a bigger beach also and hanging out at the cabin, walking and exploring and making fires etc…

Here are some pics that I took from the road on the way to the cabin last week….

Corn Fields

Corn Fields

an abandoned farm

abandoned farm

the farm again…. Xavier kept on asking to go explore it…

abandoned farm

mountains in the background…

Fields and mountains....

Church in St-Félix-de-Valois…

Church in St-Félix-de-Valois

This bug came a spent the day with us…

I found out what it was later… a Pine Sawer Beetle… It was not a small bug!

Big bug at the Cabin (Black Pine Sawyer Beetle)

Big bug at the Cabin (Black Pine Sawyer Beetle)

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