Saturday, November 24, 2012

Thanksgiving Madness...Written by Dodger


Meringue
In the last couple of weeks I made a cake, a pie and almond cookies. The cake was coconut-cream topped with meringue. I got the idea for the cake from a Fine Cooking magazine but don’t expect to see it in a recent issue because the one I got it from was dated back to December 2009. It took about three days to make and had me real cranky by the time I was done. The pie only took a few hours and I did it the night before Thanksgiving. Kitten and Sailor were out kayaking with Dad so Mom and I were left to the baking. I worked on my cake filling then did the pie. It was apple pie with extra cinnamon. I made the finishing touch by adding a pastry flower to the top.

Almond cookies with powdered sugar
The almond cookies were actually treats for when we went to our friends Sparrow and Winter’s house and had little to do with Thanksgiving but I want to include them because they are fun and new. They are basically butter cookies, you just substitute half of the butter for almond paste and add almond extract.  

Apple pie


Making advent calendars

We took Thanksgiving week off and on Monday Sparrow and Winter came over to our house to make advent calendars. Rather than taking the little chocolates from behind the doors each day (like the ones Grandma usually buys) we add a star to the calendars we made ourselves (I liked the old way). And on a final note, Mom asked me my opinion on homeschooling vs. public schooling. A couple of things I like about homeschooling are...

  • It’s more flexible than public school, for example; if we want to go on a walk or let out some energy we can.
  • My family feels closer; I am able to be around them more.
  • I get to sleep in more; hey, I’m tired!
November campfire in the sun...Sailor's perfect marshmallows!
The thing I miss most about public school is seeing my friends and my teachersI get to see them at basket ball in the winter and soccer in the summer but it’s not quite the same. I also miss getting together and playing soccer at recess, although I do play a lot with my brother and sister. 

I hope you all had a great Thanksgiving, personally I never want to see a turkey again!

PS.  Mom had us each memorize a poem to recite for Thanksgiving and mine is below.
FINALLY!  The chickens are laying!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kitten's Thanksgiving roses

A Late Walk By Robert Frost

Family hike during deer hunting season!!
 When I go up through the mowing field,
The headless aftermath,
Smooth-laid like thatch with the heavy dew,
Half closes the garden path.

And when I come to the garden ground,
The whir of sober birds
Up from the tangle of withered weeds
Is sadder than any words

A tree beside the wall stands bare,
But a leaf that lingered brown,
Disturbed, I doubt not, by my thought,
Comes softly rattling down.

I end not far from my going forth
By picking the faded blue
Of the last remaining aster flower
To carry again to you.



Sunday, November 4, 2012

Finishing up with Fall

We picked all our flowers to enjoy in case Sandy hit us hard!
 I feel at this time of year that I've trod on a "Slip'N'Slide" and it's one long slip into the next one.  The Fall and early winter are so packed with holidays and activities in the United States that it's hard to relax until you're up to your neck in January snow and winter has truly set in.


"Lela" Kitten's Araucana
On the everyday front we've been doing lots of learning through just simply living.  The kids have been recruited to stack wood, clean up the garden and yard and generally get ready for winter.  Our chickens, who are pushing 7 months, are still not laying well so we've decided to give them more love and attention (since they already have fresh water, organic feed, loads of delicious scraps, and a well insulted coop with a lake view-'cmon ladies!).  I was also motivated to clip their flight feathers to avoid escapees and needed partners in crime.

Sailor's art


Hold still!
We spent an afternoon catching, clipping, naming and photographing all the chickens.  Then the kids adopted some for their own and we've been working on watercolors of our chickens as a sort of reference. I've also added a light to the coop to give them at least 14 hours of daylight now that the days are darker.
Digging for treasured potatoes!
"Hermione" sans poop.
Child labor
More Sailor art


On the subject of animals it was our black cat's 13th birthday on Halloween this year and so he was treated like a king with candles in some (gross, wet) cat food-see the photo!  The kids were all agreed in being scary for Halloween which we wholeheartedly support, even Kitten decided to be a "dead" bridesmaid.  We live in a rural community so there's no real door-to-door candy collection, instead the town does "Trunk or Treat" and folks get themselves and their vehicles dressed up and hand out candy at the school parking lot...it's a fun time and there's a clear end which, as a parent, I appreciate.

Happy 13th birthday Mr. Black Kitty















On the official  home school front we have been working on our usual math and reading but we've been doing more writing which I am happy about since it's an area I think the kids need to practice often.  The kids wrote ghost stories and turned them into books with pictures and a front cover painted.  We also listened to Garrison Keeler's Halloween audio CD and took a spooky walking tour at a local town cemetery.  But by far the most successful creative writing exercise I've initiated so far was having the kids pick characters, locations, and "triggers" from a hat and then giving them a half hour to write a story.

Here's what I did...I took small pieces of paper and wrote names on them, all sorts of names like Mr. Fizzy, Drex and Geraldine and put them in a hat.  Then I wrote down locations, for example...the desert, a toy store, a field in winter, and put those in another hat.  And finally I wrote down "triggers" like, "Your main character can time travel", "Dinosaurs have returned", "Money grows on trees" and put these ideas in a hat.  I let the kids choose as many names as they liked and reminded them that the characters didn't have to be people.  Then they each chose one location and one trigger.  I set the timer and they wrote stories.

It may seem that I gave them too much to go on, but the purpose of the exercise (the intended purpose) was to show the kids they can do it.  They can churn out stories and not get hung up on the details such as a character's name.  Picking the ideas out of a hat was really fun and I will certainly use this game again.  The kids are very concerned about getting it "right" the first time and I want to shake that notion from them.  We proof read, we discuss what makes a good story and we talk about the process of flushing out ideas and trying things rather than expecting perfection.  However, I do want them to write with ease since it is an essential skill.  I feel if you can't write well (and quickly) then your learning is seriously impaired.  If you spend too much time in simply translating thoughts to paper you don't have time left to really explore the ideas in depth. 

I see snowy-rain coming as I write so I should go and gather the boys up...they've been outside by the fire playing a game where they are giants.  It sounds complicated.  I wanted to write about the experience of blending with the public school community now that we are home schooling...but I guess that'll have to wait til next time.  For the two of you (probably my parents :) who are reading the blog can you try to leave a comment?  I think there may be issues with this on the blog...though I have been able to leave a comment myself.
The LAST mow..in October