Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Yes! A Post! With Pictures!

I Love this Gate

I am still using my little netbook and my tablet thing these days which make blogging a challenge.  I have also been reading and creating so much that my thoughts are quite scattered and finding a few minutes to write is a challenge.  I am enjoying reading what everyone else has to say though.  I am trying to leave comments as I am able so you know I've popped by, but many times, I just can't.

It's been so interesting to see the changes around here as we head into Autumn.  It will be our first Autumn here in Idaho and I am excited to see what she brings.  The fields around our valley still have some green to them, but most field crops and all the hayfields have been mowed.

It has been a dry Summer here. The rains that had accompanied every day of Spring ended on June 21st.  They have only briefly dropped by for quick visits that barely moisten the ground.  And I find that I miss them.  In Colorado, it was quite common to have afternoon showers throughout the Spring and Summer.  All is new and different here.  Some days, I feel like I moved to another planet, not another state.

For a girl born in the desert who lived nearly all her life in cities, this is quite a change.  There are a lot of challenges, but so many wonderful gifts as well.  There are the gifts from the bounty of the land, but also the gifts of new friends.  People are quite open and welcoming here.  Though I know a few think we're crazy and wonder if we'll make it through a full winter, most are just happy we are here.

I have been heads down quite a bit as I am studying myself and preparing for our first "official" season as homeschoolers.  That being said, we have actually "done school" nearly everyday of summer.  To say that Pumpkin is a motivated learner is an understatement.  And anything Pumpkin does, Dumpling believes he needs to be a part of.  :)  At only 21 months apart, they are best friends and rivals.  Dumpling gets "frusterated" because he simply cannot do all that Pumpkin can.  And he can't.  Those 21 months at this age mean a lot.

We bought a book Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons to use in teaching Pumpkin to read about a year ago.  I had read that so many people loved it.  Somehow, I managed to be a "real" teacher for many years, but didn't know how to teach someone to read.  My sister had taught me as she learned back when I was four so I don't even remember I time I wasn't reading.  I kept asking when we'd learn to teach kids to read in my teacher education courses, but it was not done.  Weird.

Luckily, I ended up teaching older kiddos most years so we all survived.  The year I taught Kindergarten I was taught the summer before how to teach the Language Arts curriculum.  But that is not the same as teaching someone to read!  I wonder how many kids are struggling in schools today because their teachers do not know how to teach this basic thing.  We learned a lot of other things, but sadly, the college I got my certification from was heavy on theory to the total neglect of practicality.  (This was NOT Biola where I got my BA.)

Anyway, we had bought this book and I struggled with the theory behind it all.  I kept picking it up to read it and understand it so I could teach it, but I just didn't get it.  One day I laughed out loud when I read a post of Renee's talking about teaching her children to read.  She had the same book.  Want to know what she did?  She had her husband teach it!  I knew that was the answer.  The book is so...left-brained...that it is perfect for Sweetheart and Pumpkin.  I told him he should be the one to teach it.  Well, one day this summer they sat down and started it.  100 lessons later, Pumpkin is reading!

We've worked it out for Sweetheart to do the lessons with Pumpkin each morning after breakfast.  Cupcake usually heads down for a nap and I would do some morning housework and then "do school" with Dumpling.  He was more interested in just hanging out one on one with Mommy, but he has learned quite a lot in those morning times.

Over the last few years, I have been sporadically reading about Charlotte Mason's philosophy of education.  I LOVE it!  As one in love with reading and writing, married to another one in love with reading and writing, it is a perfect fit for our family.  I've laughed to discover several of my favorite writers (Tonia, Ann, Sally) have used or are using, her ideas.

There are some great websites out there with a lot of information on Charlotte Mason.  I had read some of the various things and e-books they offered.  I like the quotations from Charlotte the best, but felt a bit lost in the various writings other people wrote to explain what she said.  I was finally able to just sit down with her original writings and LOVE them.  There are simple to understand on their own to me.  Maybe it is because I am always reading other English authors from that time period, I don't know.  :)

To me, it is a bit like devotional books.  Well-written ones have a purpose and can provide insight, but if all we read is what others say about the Bible with an occasional quotation from the Bible thrown in, we will miss so much.  (No, I am not equating CM with Scripture.)  We need to read direct from the source of anything to truly understand it.

That said, I did get Educating the WholeHearted Child by the Clarksons.  Sally's writings have often ministered to my heart and have made our home a much better place.  As we move into this time of more formal education in our home, getting this book made sense.  And I am so glad I did.  It is so well written and researched and organized.  It's a bit overwhelming to suddenly have so much laid before you, but in a wonderful way.

See, it's not just a regurgitation of Charlotte's writings.  It is a framework, an outline, for creating a home that educates children not just in reading and writing, but more importantly shows how to disciple your children in Christ.  It is living a one-piece life at its finest.

You know, I wasn't planning on writing this post this morning.  I was going to share all sorts of other things!  Like about all the art we are making, all the pickles and preserves I'm putting up, our berry hunting trip, and our Tasha Tudor weekend.  But the goat is roaring and the kids are all up so I must go now.  Hope you all have a wonderful day!  I'll try to get back and write on some of the other thoughts soon.

Friday, August 26, 2011

Ten Months


She's eleven months now. I am just behind on picture postings due to technical difficulties.
Posted by Picasa

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Buried

2 gallons of plums, 23# of cucumbers, sewing projects, homeschooling, living, etc.  I would like to blog, but my regular computer is misbehaving these days and the little thing I am typing on is ok for some stuff, but I can't do pictures and the keyboard is kind of a pain.  Alas.  It will all work its way out.  Bet you thought I was still stuck in my hammock...

Monday, August 08, 2011

tonight

tonight i stopped
and i watched a spider dance in the sky overhead
spinning and weaving silken threads
invisible to my eyes

tonight i stopped
and watched the sky
turn pink and gold and dusky purple
on fire for a moment

tonight i stopped
and tasted summer
wild plums
picked moments before
matching the summer sunset


tonight i stopped
and laughed
as the juice ran down my chin and hands
turning all sticky sweet

tonight i stopped
and listened to the wind
blowing first through the elms
then setting the apple trees dancing

tonight i stopped
and heard the crunch of gravel
neighbors coming home
and the horses talking to one another
and the lonely duck on the pond making his beautiful awful honking quack
and the summer song of the crickets in the pasture

tonight i stopped
and watched the green apples and leaves
with their promises of autumn and pies
turn to shadows against the barely glowing sky
while searching for the first stars of the night

tonight i stopped
and swung in my hammock
hung between two apple trees
dreaming and counting the gifts of this life
and smiled in the moonlight
and thanked Him for it all

tonight i stopped
simply because i knew
that January will come
its frozen beauty and bare limbs blowing
the snow higher than my hammock lies
and i knew--
i would wish
that i had stopped tonight


(for ann~and her teaching me to see the gifts all around me and live fully in each moment)

Thursday, August 04, 2011

Sweet Summer Days & Time Away

Barn Door
On Thursday mornings I sneak away. It's usually just for a couple of hours and I usually just go to the local coffee shop, but it is so nice. There are no more Bunco nights, Girls Night Outs, or even just dinner with Terri. Our little party of five is together twenty four hours a day, seven days a week and we are usually right here at home. I love it so much and I need to step away as well.

For the first few months here I was only scooting out at nap times and it was just to run to the local store, or the bank, or on quick errands. Never a break, never anything particularly fun. I got weary of it all. So, finally I told Sweetheart I needed time off and I needed to have it regularly and at least once a month.

It hasn't happened every Thursday, but it does more often than not. I feel so decadent and I know from a few comments, people here don't get it.  I know I didn't when a friend blogged about taking a day off each week.  I think it was mostly jealousy.

The coffee shop is the place to be here in town.  I've met all sorts of people from town natives to people considering moving here.  This morning I chatted with a wide range of folks.  Most of the other people are at least twenty years older and that seems normal.  In Denver, I mostly hung out with people in the same stage of life as me:  working women, newlyweds, young families, etc.  Now, I met a few moms of little ones here, but not a lot.  The change of perspectives is good.

Now, I know that I can ask around the coffee shop and find to almost anything I need to know.  It's a kick because everybodys' lives intersect  in one way or another.  Of course, the flip side is that everybody knows your business whether you like it, or not!

This morning my new neighbor dropped into the coffee shop as well.  She just moved in this weekend.  I pulled up a chair for her and introduced her around.  She and I had a few laughs together about being an outsider here.  She, too, is thrown by random people just dropping by with no warning and she knew I'd understand.  I do.  And we exchanged numbers so we can call each other before we drop by.   It all works out.

I just got back inside myself a few minutes ago.  A neighbor said he was done with the raspberries at his place so after the kids went down for naps, I grabbed my basket and went picking.  (Sweetheart is here whenever I'm not.  I'm not leaving the kids alone!)  I was able to pick a few pounds and will get making some jam in a few minutes.

I was able to put up almost nine quarts of cherries the other day from gleaning someone's trees and hope to get back for more before it's too late.  I'd like to dry some for winter baking and the cherry pie I baked yesterday had only one piece left when I got up this morning.  Guess Sweetheart liked it!

So, I'm going to rub some Healing Balm all over my scratches from berry picking and get canning.  It's an overcast day here and I was sprinkled on a bit walking back.  That's nice as it won't feel too hot in here.  The cherries ended up sugar-packed and frozen because it was just too hot the other day to want to run the canner.

What are you doing these August days?

Wednesday, August 03, 2011

Not Sure if I Posted This

Love this little one.

Tuesday, August 02, 2011

Thank You, Dear Readers


It's been amazing to me to see all the new and beautiful faces smiling back at me in the little Follower box thingy and on Facebook. Thank you. I know we're all busy and it means a lot to me that you would take time out of your busy days to follow our lives on the farm. 
If you were here, we could go pick currants together, or can cherries in the kitchen, or just sit on the porch with our tea and visit. I would love it all! 
So, again, thank you for reading. It makes this new place a much less lonely place.  I appreciate each and everyone of you.
 

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