Sunday, May 31, 2009
Sewing up a storm...
Scout like Luca is an amazingly happy little baby. She is all smiles all the time and has made the last few months nothing but fun! Since she sleeps through the night and for a good part of every day I've had plenty of time to do a number of sewing projects. Below is a slide show of some of the things I've made, mostly for Scout but a few other things here and there as well. As you will see, I went just a little bit crazy on the girly dress making! -kel
Sunday, May 24, 2009
Scout's Baptism

Once again we were amazingly lucky, after a week of solid rain, the sky's parted just in time for Scout's baptism followed by a big party at our house to celebrate. Scout slept right through the ceremony at church and through most of the party at home. She was all smiles when she was awake and loved being passed around from person to person. Luca too had a blast, using the opportunity of a house full of people to head straight for all of the "no go zones". He spent more than half of the party dropping rocks into a bucket of water with the other kids. After the forth shirt change he decided to stay out of the water. It's autumn in Sydney, although a lovely sunny day, it just wasn't warm enough to be wearing a wet shirt. Endless cake, triangle sandwiches, beer and wine were consumed, smiles and laughter filled the house, one of the best parties we've had! After everyone left last night Mark and I did talk about how lovely the day was and how much we missed all of our other friends and family who weren't here to join us on this perfect day. Missing you all so much today. -kelly

St. Mary's Church Manly

Franc, Daniel, Diana and Sabrina Renzi (Scout's godparents & their children)
Mark, Scout, Luca, Kelly, Margaret and Graham Ferguson
St. Mary's Church Manly

Luca and friend Joska having a blast in the bucket of water.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Mothers Day
Saturday, May 09, 2009
Friday, May 01, 2009
West Oz – Pt IV: Margaret’s & Yallingup
The last part of our adventure. After an uneventful drive from Esperance to Albany and an overnight stay (apart from the speeding ticket I have decided I like Albany a lot). We headed north toward Margaret River and Yallingup – renowned wine territory and in size at least much more like the coastal holiday destinations we have been in Australia before.
Many more towns to pass through on this part of the drive, a great coastal stop in Denmark (again, amazing coastline and beach) but the memorable part of this day was the short cut we took that resulted in 40kms of backcountry unsealed roads with a logging truck on our tail and grave doubts in our mind the whole way that we would get to the end of the road and it would be a dead end – it wasn’t a dead end, what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger and we arrived at where we were staying and it was one of the coolest places I have stayed at – check out the link (Smiths Beach) and look at the “gallery” section.
Each of the days that we were here we visited a few wineries in the morning (and brought a case each day – some awesome shiraz and cab savs from this area), spent the afternoon at the beach and the pool where we were staying had a quick visit to the local providore followed by Kelly making an awesome dinner and enjoying a bottle of the wine we had brought that day. The drives between wineries were fun with fields of what from a distance look like sheep but turned out to be kangaroos and another being deer (a venison farm).

We had a few days in Perth to end the holiday, we explored around a bit more and found some neighbourhoods that we really liked, went to the beach, Luca went to Zoo with Em and Corey, we celebrated Emmy’s 11th birthday and finally we were ready to go home.
Many more towns to pass through on this part of the drive, a great coastal stop in Denmark (again, amazing coastline and beach) but the memorable part of this day was the short cut we took that resulted in 40kms of backcountry unsealed roads with a logging truck on our tail and grave doubts in our mind the whole way that we would get to the end of the road and it would be a dead end – it wasn’t a dead end, what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger and we arrived at where we were staying and it was one of the coolest places I have stayed at – check out the link (Smiths Beach) and look at the “gallery” section.
Each of the days that we were here we visited a few wineries in the morning (and brought a case each day – some awesome shiraz and cab savs from this area), spent the afternoon at the beach and the pool where we were staying had a quick visit to the local providore followed by Kelly making an awesome dinner and enjoying a bottle of the wine we had brought that day. The drives between wineries were fun with fields of what from a distance look like sheep but turned out to be kangaroos and another being deer (a venison farm).

We had a few days in Perth to end the holiday, we explored around a bit more and found some neighbourhoods that we really liked, went to the beach, Luca went to Zoo with Em and Corey, we celebrated Emmy’s 11th birthday and finally we were ready to go home.
West Oz – Pt III: Esperance
Leaving Albany we had planned on getting a few things for the road but we had also forgotten Australia shuts down on Good Friday – nothing open accept a gas station (luckily!). On the way out of Albany I also fell into a speeding trap and I am eagerly awaiting a ticket in the mail – unsigned speed camera in a 90km area about four hundred metres from the start of 110km speed zone – get me out of Albany.
The drive from Albany to Esperance is 500km and there are two small towns (two gas stations, no fast food chain, and a pub type towns) to pass through – and I don’t mean that you travel on a freeway and bypass the towns, there is no freeway and no bypass. Luckily the vegetation changes a lot as you go and it is really beautiful in many places. Getting back to the point I was about to make – before we left Seattle Kelly and I were enjoying a meat pie in Burien (outside of Seattle) and there was a large map of Australia on the wall, we decided to do the “spin around five times and put your finger on the map thing” and one of the places we hit was this dinky little town called Ravensthorpe – well Ravensthorpe is one of the two towns that we passed through so we had some personal excitement for the drive.
We made Esperance late in the afternoon and my sister and her family were already there having driven from Perth the day before. After getting settled our first trip was to this old wooden pier that in its day was used to transport iron ore to ships out in the bay but now supports about 500 fisher people. There is a very smart (and very fat) sea lion that basically lives at the pier eating the scraps when fish are cleaned after being caught. Luca enjoyed seeing the sea lion and he also helped his cousin Emilly catch a fish – he was so excited about the fish flapping around on the hook that he kissed it (see pic below).

Esperance sells itself as having the best beaches in Australia – it may have the best beaches in the world. The coastline down here is crazy beautiful (my pictures do not do it justice). We had a fun time swimming at a beach with dolphins, visiting an petting zoo, Luca got to ride a miniature train, I ventured to the pub to watch some footy – but basically we just hung out a lot with my sister and her family. It was also an adventure packing all four of us in a small hotel room. From his cot next to our bed, Luca made regularly commentary through the night – mostly telling me to stop moving so much.
The drive from Albany to Esperance is 500km and there are two small towns (two gas stations, no fast food chain, and a pub type towns) to pass through – and I don’t mean that you travel on a freeway and bypass the towns, there is no freeway and no bypass. Luckily the vegetation changes a lot as you go and it is really beautiful in many places. Getting back to the point I was about to make – before we left Seattle Kelly and I were enjoying a meat pie in Burien (outside of Seattle) and there was a large map of Australia on the wall, we decided to do the “spin around five times and put your finger on the map thing” and one of the places we hit was this dinky little town called Ravensthorpe – well Ravensthorpe is one of the two towns that we passed through so we had some personal excitement for the drive.
We made Esperance late in the afternoon and my sister and her family were already there having driven from Perth the day before. After getting settled our first trip was to this old wooden pier that in its day was used to transport iron ore to ships out in the bay but now supports about 500 fisher people. There is a very smart (and very fat) sea lion that basically lives at the pier eating the scraps when fish are cleaned after being caught. Luca enjoyed seeing the sea lion and he also helped his cousin Emilly catch a fish – he was so excited about the fish flapping around on the hook that he kissed it (see pic below).
Esperance sells itself as having the best beaches in Australia – it may have the best beaches in the world. The coastline down here is crazy beautiful (my pictures do not do it justice). We had a fun time swimming at a beach with dolphins, visiting an petting zoo, Luca got to ride a miniature train, I ventured to the pub to watch some footy – but basically we just hung out a lot with my sister and her family. It was also an adventure packing all four of us in a small hotel room. From his cot next to our bed, Luca made regularly commentary through the night – mostly telling me to stop moving so much.
Sunday, April 26, 2009
West Oz – Pt II: Albany
A four and a half hour drive from Perth to Albany and not a lot in between. We made a brief stop in Williams and had lunch in Kojunup. Pies and a playground for an hour. Both Luca and Scout were great in the car and slept a lot of the way. We arrived in Albany late in the day, Kelly had booked a really cool house right next to the beach. The beach was beautiful so we took a walk before dinner (pic below). A notable night because Luca spent his first night in a “big boy” bed.
The next day coffee (bad) and some shopping behind us we set out to explore Albany. Albany is an old whaling town and was the first town settled in W.A. – a lot of history and a lot of old buildings around. Albany is on the Southern Ocean so it is hit by winds and wild seas straight up from Antarctica and as a result of this it has some very cool coastline and a massive windmill farm. The highlight of the day for us (Kelly may be torn on that statement given she found “bargain” fabric at a local store) was the windmill farm. I know it sounds very boring but with a fog in and the way they sit on the coastline they were very eerie but looked very cool at the same time. On the way out to the windmills, driving along a dirt road, a joey kangaroo jumped out in front of us and it’s mother was right behind it. As they bounced off down the road Kel and I both turned around to see if Luca had seen it and he was sound asleep.
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Another great thing about staying in a house is that it has cooking facilities which saves us from multiple nights of take-away which would be the only other valid option with Luca and Scout in tow. On our last night in Albany we went to the local Dan Murphy’s bottle shop to get a bottle of wine to enjoy with dinner and there were crazy scenes! ... lots of people with multiple shopping carts full of booze at the check out getting ready for the Easter holidays – they do things a bit differently in rural Australia, chocolate eggs on the rocks.
The next day coffee (bad) and some shopping behind us we set out to explore Albany. Albany is an old whaling town and was the first town settled in W.A. – a lot of history and a lot of old buildings around. Albany is on the Southern Ocean so it is hit by winds and wild seas straight up from Antarctica and as a result of this it has some very cool coastline and a massive windmill farm. The highlight of the day for us (Kelly may be torn on that statement given she found “bargain” fabric at a local store) was the windmill farm. I know it sounds very boring but with a fog in and the way they sit on the coastline they were very eerie but looked very cool at the same time. On the way out to the windmills, driving along a dirt road, a joey kangaroo jumped out in front of us and it’s mother was right behind it. As they bounced off down the road Kel and I both turned around to see if Luca had seen it and he was sound asleep.
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Another great thing about staying in a house is that it has cooking facilities which saves us from multiple nights of take-away which would be the only other valid option with Luca and Scout in tow. On our last night in Albany we went to the local Dan Murphy’s bottle shop to get a bottle of wine to enjoy with dinner and there were crazy scenes! ... lots of people with multiple shopping carts full of booze at the check out getting ready for the Easter holidays – they do things a bit differently in rural Australia, chocolate eggs on the rocks.
Thursday, April 23, 2009
West Oz – Pt I: Perth
We had a lot of fun last year road tripping around the south east part of Australia so we decided to head out again, this time around the south west part of the country (Perth to Esperance through Albany and Margaret River). Scouty’s first big adventure!
Luca had been speaking about visiting his cousins Corey and Emilly for weeks and was excited to be going on “holidays” in an “airplane” and taking “suitcases”. The first hurdle came up before taking off when we had to check bags. Luca wanted the suitcases to literally travel with us and wasn’t happy when they were taken away. After that he wasn’t about to surrender his back pack without a fight at security - we got him through but he was unhappy until Kelly took him up to the Qantas lounge and he got to pick out some food and drinks. The 4+ hour flight to Perth went well, mainly thanks to on-demand entertainment service and the novelty of wearing a “music hat” (head phones) for Luca – through all this not a peep from Scout.
We spent the first four days with my sister and her family in Perth. Luca loves hanging out with his cousin’s and they are great with him. We checked out the city, went down to Freemantle, picked the kids up from school and watched Em play volleyball for the school. Of course we also hit a number of parks so that Luca could play on the toys, the highlight being Kings Park with awesome views of the city and a great kids area (see Dinosaur pic below). Perth is a nice city, great outdoor facilities (parks, river area and cycle ways), it is growing quickly but definitely feels (and is) much smaller than Sydney.
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A fully loaded car, the kids in car seats, snacks all packed and Kelly’s meticulous planning behind us we left Perth and headed south along the Albany Hwy.
Luca had been speaking about visiting his cousins Corey and Emilly for weeks and was excited to be going on “holidays” in an “airplane” and taking “suitcases”. The first hurdle came up before taking off when we had to check bags. Luca wanted the suitcases to literally travel with us and wasn’t happy when they were taken away. After that he wasn’t about to surrender his back pack without a fight at security - we got him through but he was unhappy until Kelly took him up to the Qantas lounge and he got to pick out some food and drinks. The 4+ hour flight to Perth went well, mainly thanks to on-demand entertainment service and the novelty of wearing a “music hat” (head phones) for Luca – through all this not a peep from Scout.
We spent the first four days with my sister and her family in Perth. Luca loves hanging out with his cousin’s and they are great with him. We checked out the city, went down to Freemantle, picked the kids up from school and watched Em play volleyball for the school. Of course we also hit a number of parks so that Luca could play on the toys, the highlight being Kings Park with awesome views of the city and a great kids area (see Dinosaur pic below). Perth is a nice city, great outdoor facilities (parks, river area and cycle ways), it is growing quickly but definitely feels (and is) much smaller than Sydney.
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A fully loaded car, the kids in car seats, snacks all packed and Kelly’s meticulous planning behind us we left Perth and headed south along the Albany Hwy.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Family Photo

Sunday, March 08, 2009
Saturday, March 07, 2009
South Curly
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Yesterday we had our first family outing to the beach, the water was beautiful and we avoided the sharks that have been spotted all over Sydney in the last few weeks. Luca has become very confident in the water and is working on his sand castle building skills! A great time was had by all, here's to many more Saturday's spent at the beach as a family! -kel
Monday, March 02, 2009
Sunday, March 01, 2009
Bubba Scout Ferguson
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Friday, February 13, 2009
Week 3

Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Sunday, January 25, 2009
Our daughter - Scout Andrine Ferguson
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Saturday, January 17, 2009
The Ferguson Trio's Final Gig
One week out from the new baby being born, Luca's new brother or sister - we are excited. Coming to a venue near you the Ferguson Quartet as of next weekend!
Knowing that Kelly and I are not going to be able to get away by ourselves too much over the coming months we had Luca stay with his grandparents (the Australian varierty) for a few hours on Saturday and went to the movies to see Benjamin Button. I know Kel gave the movie a big thumbs up and Brad Pitt a bigger thumbs up.
We did a Ferguson Sunday morning special today and headed north along the beaches about 20 minutes to Avalon. There is an exceptional French style bakery that we get to about once a month and we ususally stock up on a week's worth of croissants. While we are out there we usually have a picnic breakie and often it is at North Avalon beach. If the weather is lousy it can be in the car looking out at the surf, but if it is great like today we go and sit on the beach. Luca enjoyed checking out the rock pools for crabs and throwing rocks to watch them spalsh in the water - typical boy stuff.
As well as family and friends we write this for Luca to hopefully enjoy when he grows up - it is now also for his brother or sister, our new baby. I am excited for what this new little person is going to bring us, and knowing how much Kelly and I both love our siblings, how awesome it will be for Luca. I pray everything goes well this week and can't wait to tell you all about it.
Knowing that Kelly and I are not going to be able to get away by ourselves too much over the coming months we had Luca stay with his grandparents (the Australian varierty) for a few hours on Saturday and went to the movies to see Benjamin Button. I know Kel gave the movie a big thumbs up and Brad Pitt a bigger thumbs up.
We did a Ferguson Sunday morning special today and headed north along the beaches about 20 minutes to Avalon. There is an exceptional French style bakery that we get to about once a month and we ususally stock up on a week's worth of croissants. While we are out there we usually have a picnic breakie and often it is at North Avalon beach. If the weather is lousy it can be in the car looking out at the surf, but if it is great like today we go and sit on the beach. Luca enjoyed checking out the rock pools for crabs and throwing rocks to watch them spalsh in the water - typical boy stuff.
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Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Sydney International

Tuesday, January 06, 2009
An afternoon at the SCG
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