Tuesday, February 28, 2012

A Retreat...and a Treat

Wonderfully encouraging.  That sums up the twenty-four hours I spent at the Women's Retreat this past weekend.

We had excellent teaching on being female and made in the image of God.  We enjoyed singing praises together.  Games livened things up a bit.  Lots of conversation.  And, of course, there was good food to appreciate as only a pregnant woman can.

We even had some free time on Saturday afternoon, so a number of us went to the mall nearby.  And I splurged a little and got my hair cut at a nice salon.  What a treat!  I don't get regular haircuts.   I did get a trim at a Great Clips before Christmas, but it didn't impress me.  The last time I darkened the doors of a salon was last June.  And I was berated by the stylist for not getting regular cuts.  My excuse?  I'm too lazy because I hate finding a sitter for the kids.  And it's so expensive.

But this time, the kids were home with Daddy, and I decided it was time to get rid of the tired-Mommy look.      



This was the result, and since I'm posting a picture, you can assume that I'm pleased.  Stephen was, too, which is the real test.

Duplicating this at home wasn't as hard as I expected once I invested in a flat iron.  And, as requested, I can still pull it all into a ponytail on those days when there's no time for styling...like when I'm too tired to drag myself out of bed before the kids come knocking in the morning.  Or when the baby keeps me up half the night.

Of course, that's three months away. Maybe I'll splurge a little on another cut before then.  But I doubt it.


Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Happy Fastnacht Day!

Happy Fat Tuesday...or Shrove Tuesday...or Fastnacht Day!

We call it Fastnacht Day around here due to our Pennsylvania Dutch (German) heritage.  What a tasty tradition to introduce to the kids!

We did make doughnuts two years ago, but somehow Fastnacht Day sneaked up on us last year and we missed it.  Not so this year!  Today we used an old family recipe and fried up some glazed fastnachts to celebrate the beginning of Lent.

Ok, we don't necessarily observe Lent in the traditional ways here.  But doughnuts are tasty anytime, so why not?

The ingredients are common (we substituted rice milk for milk due to Luke's milk allergy):


I had an eager, little helper, too.  She wanted to do everything; she got to help make the dough, cut out some doughnuts, and then dip them in glaze.

 Fry 'em up!

 Cool 'em down.

Time for some glaze...

CAUGHT!
This girl had to make numerous trips to wash her hands because she just couldn't resist licking the glaze from her fingers.


Cooling...

 Another helper...

 More dipping...

...and more dipping.

 And then there was the mess...somehow everybody else disappeared at that point.

 Time for taste-testing!!



Yum.  Glad there are leftovers!
   

Friday, February 17, 2012

Twenty-four down; twelve to go

Weeks of school, that is.

Just this morning I realized that we've completed 24 weeks already!  With 36 weeks in our plan, that means we're 2/3 of the way done. WOOHOO!!

Then I got the bright idea (yes, 2/3 of the way through the year) to log the books that Luke has been reading throughout the year.  It gives me a sense of accomplishment to have a to-do list to check-off (and in light of that, sometimes I have been known to add "done" tasks to a list that didn't contain that item to begin with, though my husband objects to this practice).  So having a list of books that Luke has read gives me a sense of what he's accomplished...even if they weren't all planned out and then completed. 

He's read 26 books so far this school year!  Some are longer; some are shorter.  But just having that list to look at makes me feel as though we're accomplishing more in this homeschooling business than it might sometimes seem.  He seemed to feel that sense of accomplishment too when we were looking over his list, and it also appeared to motivate him to read even more.  He started Robinson Crusoe (the Great Classics version) this morning.

I'm actually already planning for next year, crazy as that may sound.  I love the planning; but I do also have a good reason for getting started early.  You see, there's a baby to be born 'round about the end of this school year, and I, for one, want to put school completely out of my mind for the 2 or 3 months of summer.  Just adjusting to having a baby in the house again and lovin' on her.  No pressures of school.  No planning over the summer, no curriculum to order. 

So...yesterday I received my first order of materials (phonics, grammar, and logic stuff), and I placed my second, and much more exciting, order.  Next year we are going to use Tapestry of Grace Year 2!  This really could only excite you if you are familiar with this curriculum.  But I have been looking it over for several years and trying to figure out if it's worth the $$ and if it would work for us.  I think I'm finally convinced that it is and it will.  Now, I just have to wait until it arrives so I can peruse to my heart's content...and then order the books to go with it. (Can you tell this is giving me goose-bumps? It's SO exciting!)

I'm doubly excited because a friend will be using TOG Year 2 next year with her kiddos as well, and it will be fun to be studying the same topics at the same time...and maybe even work out some fun field trips together. 

Anyway, a lot of our curriculum will remain the same - First Language Lessons 1 & 4 for grammar, Sequential Spelling 2, Explode the Code for phonics, Writing With Ease, Building Thinking Skills for logic, Math Mammoth, and Handwriting Without Tears.  We will probably also continue the awesome Bible curriculum that we've been using even though TOG does include Bible...just because we love it.  

Science has been a little flaky here this year, although we have made a basic study of biomes and now human anatomy.  We had started off with Apologia's Exploring Creation with Botany, but after ten weeks of using it, we just weren't happy with it - dull and way too much information for a K-er and 3rd grader who aren't science-machines.  So we changed it up, used Mr. Q's Life Science for a while, and now we're just reading real books on anatomy.

I think next year we will use Elemental Science - Chemistry for elementary.  It uses mostly real books rather than a text, which I like.  I expect we'll have plenty of experiements - which I don't much like but I know are needful.  And it's not expensive.  So we'll give it a shot and hope it's a good fit here.

I guess that's pretty much the run-down on our next-year plans. I can't believe that I will have a fourth grader and a first grader.  It seems like the fourth grader just was the first grader last week.  And the three-year-old just was the baby...although she's the first of the bunch to have turned three without having a new, littler brother or sister around.  Well, time marches on, as they say... 


Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Happy Valentine's Day!

We don't go all out for Valentine's Day around here, but we do make cookies.  Oodles of them.  So we did some quick school this morning, read about Saint Valentine, and spent much of the rest of the day in the kitchen.

My little helpers...



And the fruits of our labors...

Frosted Sugar cookies

Dark chocolate-dipped Macaroons



The Obligatory Belly Pic

This was almost 2 weeks ago.  I'm a little slow in posting...

Here is a slightly more recent picture...with a grown-up photographer behind the lens...




Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Field Trip Day

I am wildly happy to report that I am feeling better - praise God!  So...since we've been stuck in the house for what seems like forever, I decided that today would be a great day for a field trip.

We've been studying the Middle Ages in history, specifically the building of cathedrals across Europe.  And it just so happens that we live less than an hour from the sixth largest cathedral in the world, the Washington National Cathedral.

Since Stephen's office is just a short drive from there, we dropped him off at work this morning and then drove up Embassy Row.  The kids were fascinated by all of the foreign flags we saw.  I was rather excited to find free parking in front of the cathedral.  It's the little things, you know.

Construction on the cathedral began in 1907 during Teddy Roosevelt's term in office, and the final stone was laid in the year 1990, during George H. W. Bush's administration.  While eighty-three years is a long time, the tour guide reminded us that most of the cathedrals built in Europe during the middle ages took several hundred years to complete.  So this one was relatively quick.

The cathedral suffered damage during the August 23rd earthquake that shook the east coast.  Interior repairs were made, and nets were put up to catch anymore falling stone or mortar.  The exterior tower is still being repaired, but the building reopened in November. 

We took a highlights tour and snapped a bunch of pictures. Our tour included the Nave (where President Woodrow Wilson lies in a crypt!) as well as the children's chapel where everything was paid for by a family who had suffered the loss of a child.  They indicated that every part of the chapel was to be made to fit a 6-year old child, even the organ.  We also saw several other chapels underneath the Nave.   

We also took the elevator up to the 7th floor where we had a neat view of the city, including the Capitol building and the Washington Monument.



Gorgeous stained glass windows with the morning sun streaming through



In the center you can see a astronaut in space.  One of the former choir boys (I think) was the third man on the moon, and the architects honored him this way.  They also designed a stained glass window with a space theme - earth and moon.


I particularly loved this stained glass window - it had a Revelation 4 theme.



The bishop's throne...the word cathedral comes from the Latin word cathedra which means chair. A cathedral is where the bishop's chair is located.



The view from the 7th floor observation deck.


Construction on the highest tower after the earthquake


The flying buttresses which give support to the outer walls

After touring the National Cathedral, we munched down a quick lunch in the car and made our way over to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.  There we took a short tour and saw how paper money is printed and cut and quality-checked.

Bureau of Engraving and Printing