• The Year According to Sokka

    December 25, 2025
    Family

    (With Commentary by Katara)

    Sokka
    Katara

    I am Sokka. I live here. I observe everything.

    When I do not personally witness events, Caleb explains them to me later using photos, gestures, and enthusiasm. Katara corrects details.


    January

    January began with my humans upgrading the sailboat with a new motor. Apparently the old one “retired to Florida,” which sounds suspiciously pleasant. After waiting far too long, the boat finally moved to the Lake Norman Yacht Club. Caleb went on his first ride on the family boat and made it very clear this was not his first boat ride overall. He considers himself an experienced sailor and later explained this to me confidently.

    Katara and I stayed home. I guarded the couch. Katara guarded her space. Caleb later reviewed photos with me and pointed at the water repeatedly, which I understood to mean the boat performed acceptably.


    February

    February involved house projects and something called “siding.” It seems like they’ve been working on this for years. I did not approve of the noise.

    Katara: Or the dust. Or the disruption to naps.

    This was also the month Caleb started solid foods, beginning with crab legs. Caleb enjoys sharing food with us. Katara enjoys sharing when it involves chicken or seafood. Otherwise, Caleb is “too enthusiastic.” Laura and Caleb attended a Valentine’s Day party hosted by the Yorks, and Caleb experienced snow for the first time. Katara observed this from inside, where it is warmer and safer.


    March

    March slowed things down. Caleb tried the swings at the park and made it clear he was unimpressed. He has since revised that opinion. He also spent a lot of time playing in the dirt, which the humans say is when potatoes were planted.

    This month brought major developments: Caleb started pulling himself up on furniture, got his first tooth, and began experimenting with playing with us. His methods lacked refinement. I remained patient.

    Katara: I chose invisibility.


    April

    April involved travel. Laura and Caleb flew to Iowa, leaving Katara and me in charge of the house. We ran things efficiently. Caleb later told me they spent Easter on the boat sailing while streaming the easter service, which he described proudly as “boat church.” He prefers this to being handed over to strangers in church daycare, even if a large wave occasionally interrupts his nap.

    Caleb decided the V-berth was an acceptable playpen.

    Katara: I would not have chosen it.

    Neither of us were invited aboard, so our opinions were not requested.


    May

    May brought racing. Laura led the boat to a third-place finish in the all-women’s Hurricane Regatta. This was helped by the fourth-place boat being a no-show, but I believe wins should be accepted without unnecessary detail.

    Around this time, Caleb discovered climbing. Furniture. Steps. Humans. Nothing was exempt. He later described this phase as “practice.”

    Katara: Practice should not involve me.


    June

    June introduced swim lessons. Caleb immediately decided water is excellent. After lessons, the fun continued at the yacht club, where Caleb splashed, kicked, laughed, and confidently attempted to soak everyone nearby.

    Caleb later explained these days to me as “long good days,” which I believe means exhausting for the humans and extremely enjoyable for him.


    July

    July was loud. Caleb saw fireworks for the first time, which he described as “big lights” and “boom.” He also turned one and received his own cake. He enjoyed it and shared crumbs generously. I appreciated this.

    This was also when the potatoes planted in March were finally harvested. Caleb also demonstrated that he had outgrown the V-berth playpen by climbing out of it. I was not surprised. I have been climbing successfully for years, though no one celebrates me with cake.


    August

    August was exhausting. Caleb went to Florida to see his cousins and went swimming with them in both the Gulf and Grandma and Grandpa’s pool. When he returned, he explained this repeatedly through splashing demonstrations in the living room.

    Later, the humans traveled to Michigan for another birthday celebration. Caleb played with a balloon, had his own slide, received a favorite new drum, met Uncle Greg, and attended the Renaissance Festival. Turkey legs and jousting were a hit.

    Katara: I would accept a turkey leg.

    Caleb also received a wagon, which he enjoys pushing around the neighborhood with purpose.


    September

    September slowed down. Caleb and Mommy went to the mountains and saw bears and elk. Caleb later explained this to me using photos and very serious noises. I understood that the animals were large and important.

    Back at home, Trevor worked on the house using rented equipment, including a lift to reach places that were previously unreachable and therefore suspicious. Caleb “helped” and supervised closely. I believe the humans also pretend to work sometimes.


    October

    October focused on finishing the basement apartment. Tools were everywhere. Caleb provided instruction by pointing, supervising, and occasionally relocating critical items.

    October also included playing in leaves, interacting with the neighbor’s cat in the yard (which I noticed), and trick-or-treating. There was a sugar incident involving Nerds. Caleb opened the box when nobody was looking.

    Katara: I was not consulted.


    November

    November began with waterfall hikes. Caleb pointed out trail markers along the trail like an experienced guide and took his role seriously.

    Back at home, Trevor engaged in battle with invading squirrels, who showed no respect for the house or its boundaries. I observed from indoors.

    Katara: The squirrels started it.

    Later in the month, the humans traveled to Grancha and Margo’s house for Thanksgiving, leaving us home. We did not travel. We stayed here. Alone. On Thanksgiving. We were fed on schedule, but the principle still matters.

    On that trip, Caleb met Grancha’s dog, Fizzy — a dog smaller than both of us. This was confusing but manageable. The trip also included separate days at Animal Kingdom and the aquarium. Caleb later described safaris, animals everywhere, bright colors, moving water, and many fish.

    Katara: Too many fish.

    Caleb clearly had an excellent time. We were slightly jealous.


    December

    December was busy but gentler. Grammy came to visit. Caleb played with her often. She is allergic to cats, so she never pets us.

    Katara: This is acceptable. Affection should be optional.

    Caleb met Santa and screamed. Trevor and Laura participated in a lighted sailboat parade, leaving us home to reflect on our importance. Later, Caleb played with the barn cats at Aunt Melinda’s house.

    Katara: Barn cats are loud, unsupervised, and lack standards.

    The year ended with family time, festive lights, and Caleb falling asleep in unexpected places — something he practiced diligently all year. We watched from warm spots.


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  • Merry Christmas

    December 24, 2023
    Adventures

    We didn’t do a Christmas card or post last year so we’ll start with a quick summary of 2022.

    1. Laura spent most of the year working in Michigan
    2. Southwest Airlines decided we wanted to spend a weekend in Nashville, instead of Pensacola.
    3. We Bought a truck.
    4. We bought a boat. (a couple days after getting a truck that could tow it.)
    5. Sailed 8 hours across Lake Erie for our Anniversary.
    6. Trevor dug a hole and waterproofed the basement.
    7. Trevor started a new job as an insurance adjuster.
    8. Laura moved back to NC just in time for Christmas.

    Now on to 2023…

    After spending the weekends of 2022 sailing our 1980’s 22′ McGregor Venture sailboat on Lake Erie we spent a Saturday morning in March looking for a slip on Lake Norman so we wouldn’t need to mess with the boat ramp. We were successful in finding a slip. However, the slip came with a nearly free boat. The next weekend, we had increased our sailboat fleet from 1 to 2 boats.

    Most of our weekends in the spring were spent on our new boat, a 1975 C&C 24. As far as we can tell, it’s been in Lake Norman for at least the past 20 years. Her name is Sua Sponte, or Sponte’ for short. She needed a fair bit of work and we ended up stripping most of the running riggings (ropes and hardware) off of the McGregor to get Sponte’ sailing.

    The first sail we took her out was a great downwind sail. Someone at our dock helped us reef the sail (tie up the bottom of the sail to make it smaller) and rig up some blocks (pulleys) since we didn’t have all the hardware we needed and it was a little too breezy for using the full sail. One other piece of hardware we didn’t have yet was a motor.

    We left the dock with sail power only and when we got to the other end of the lake and turned around, the wind had picked up substantially. After turning around we were heeled over enough that the rails were in the water.

    We’re still working our way up to being comfortable sailing in those kinds of conditions but we do enjoy taking Sponte’ out on a nice windy day.

    View this post on Instagram

    A post shared by Trevor Thomas (@thoma4tr)

    Even though Laura was back in NC, she was still out of town frequently for work. A few times, we took advantage of this and spent some time camping and hiking near one of her job sites. In May we took Roscoe hiking in the New River Gorge in West Virginia.

    Over memorial day weekend, we spent time with Greg before he moved to Japan and celebrated Trevor’s Mom’s retirement.

    As the weather started getting warmer into the summer, it kept getting warmer and warmer and the wind kept getting slower and slower. We went out a few times, but mostly just drifted in the hot sun. and got bounced around by power boats. As the summer came to an end, the wind started picking up and we were able to have some great sailing with friends.

    We spent a quick weekend in Myrtle Beach for our anniversary so Trevor could get all you can eat crab legs.

    In September, we stayed in a cottage on the Tuckaseegee River and caught up with some friends at Tyler and Stephanie’s wedding.

    In December, we got Sponte’ decorated and participated in the Lake Norman Yacht Club’s boat parade. We had some engine issues the put us further and further back in the line up of boats since we couldn’t get it to go any faster than 2-3 MPH. 

    The following weekend we took off for the Odyssey Sailing Festival in the British Virgin Islands where we met some incredible people and spent a week sailing on Good Vibrations, a 50′ Fontaine Pajot sailing catamaran. (This trip deserves its own post. Sign up for our very infrequent newsletter to get future posts in your inbox). We ended our Caribbean adventure in Puerto Rico at Laura’s coworkers wedding.

    We’re looking forward to 2024 and the adventures it has in store for us.

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  • Happy Thanksgiving

    November 23, 2023
    Family
    Photo by RDNE Stock project on Pexels.com
    No comments on Happy Thanksgiving

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