I'm a duck AND a dinosaur!
Here is Lyla wearing latex gloves on her feet (thanks Carla) and pretending to be a chicken (and later a dinosaur) :).

I had a tough day yesterday. My late night monitoring did not go as planned. We couldn't keep baby B on the monitor and after an hour of trying we needed to call in ultrasound to locate them. I know, I have already heard this "where could she have gone?" :) haha well if the babies aren't facing in a good direction to pick up a heart beat we sometimes can't locate it. Sometimes one heartbeat is coming in so loudly you can't hear the other one. Even after ultrasound came in and showed us exactly where the heartbeats were we STILL couldn't pick them both up! Naughty babies!! Eventually we found them and I had to uncomfortably hold the monitor in place for a half hour to get the tracing. That was after midnight so I got to bed late. Up again at 6 for my morning monitoring and history repeated itself. Long story short by 9am another nurse came in and found them in 2 minutes! I was so frustrated but relieved to hear 2 hearts beating.
Fun news: I heard and felt a baby hiccup for the first time this week! I heard it on the monitor (sounded like a loud drum beating every few seconds) and I felt it too! I love it!!
Our ultrasound yesterday went very well. All blood flow looks good and no signs of any problems (knock on wood!) :)
I also got to see a baby yawn on the ultrasound!!! It was the most awesome sight! We focused in on baby A's face and the next thing we knew she had her mouth wide open! Yawning and stretching her head!! She then began to drink the amniotic fluid :) I could just squeeze her! Just as my heart was melting baby B's butt popped right in front of baby A's face! lol
I found this on another momo mom's blog (htttp://monoamnioticstories.blogspot.com/) and thought I would post it too.
Facts about Mono Mono Twins
*Monoamniotic twins are always identical
*Monoamniotic twins are the result of a late splitting egg; one that split around 8-12 days after fertilization
*Monoamniotic twins only occur in 1% of twins
*Monoamniotic twins share a placenta and amniotic sac which means they have skin to skin contact
*Monoamniotic twins are considered extremely high risk because of the risk of cord compression leading to fetal death as a result of umbilical cord entanglement
*Monoamniotic twins are always delivered by C-Section
*Monoamniotic twins are usually delivered between 32-34 weeks gestation because the risks of staying in utero are greater than the risks associated with a premature birth
*75% of monoamniotic twins are girls
*inpatient monitoring at viability yeilds the greatest success rates
Love and blessing to all!