Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Strawberry Harvest
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Home School Art Show
Grins

Yankee Doodle and Trees In Winter

Ribbon Grins

Flowers in Spring Kirigami

Trees in Winter

We had an exciting of evening at the SHARE art show last night. The big kids each entered 2 projects and family/friends were there to celebrate with us.
Jasper made a paper "Yankee Doodle" with various materials. And he won third place for "Trees in Winter". He did this piece for an SCCS project. They used ink on paper and blew the tree designs on with a straw.
Tullaia also did "Trees in Winter" and won Honorable Mention for her kirigami (a variation of origami that includes cutting) piece "Flowers In Spring". She also won the Children's choice awards for this one, when all the kids that participate get to vote for their favorites.
The women who organized the show did an excellent job with everything and it was very special for the kids.
SHARE has been an excellent home school resource.
Monday, May 3, 2010
Science Blitz

We have decided to take the week off of regular school work to accommodate yet another creature to learn about.
Justin found a baby snake this morning outside the basement door. We will keep him for a few days in his new temporary habitat the kids created.
We also had to move one of the itty bitty crawdads into his own quarters because he wants to eat the smaller one.
Sunday, May 2, 2010
Forest Park 365
I attended an art opening on Friday with a picture for each day of the year in Forest Park. It was a wonderful evening with lovely photos and wonderful people.
http://www.edwardcrim.com/FP365_May.htmlI think this is up for a month, so if you are in STL you should pop over.
Taddies
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Ancient Greece
Following our Story of the World chapter on the Wars of the Greeks, we did "stone" sculpture with soap. The Greeks did so well making statues and friezes that when their towns and cities were taken over, their hard work was taken as bounty.
The kids also worked hard and enjoyed "sculpting", but the next day I found Avery with Jasper's project crumbled on the floor.
One of the benefits of working with stone i suppose.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Heartless Christians
In usual fashion, I read the the wrong day of my daily reading. The page must have rustled back when i got up for my coffee.
So O. Chambers is talking about Romans 8 and says this, "Beware of outstripping God by your very longing to do His will. We run ahead of Him in a thousand and one activities, consequently we get so burdened with persons and with difficulties that we do not worship God, we do not intercede."
What fantastic thoughts regarding relationships! To bring each difficult person and circumstance before God in prayer, surrendering our own opinions and feelings. Sounds easy when sitting down for a quiet time, but not as much when someone causes me great distress.
He goes on to say, "A heartless Christian must be a terrible grief to Our Lord."
One reason i never wanted to be a Christian. And here I am.
Great River Road
McAdams Peak
Brussel's Ferry Crossing
Swig...
and Grin
On Sunday we went hiking on the east side...Illinois!
Pere Marquette State Park encompasses 8,000 acres at the confluence of the Mississippi and Illinois Rivers. After a picnic and a hike up McAdams Peak, we took the free Brussels Ferry over to Calhoun County. It is at the tip of a peninsula and the main form of transportation is by ferry. Four ferries are available to cross the Illinois and Mississippi rivers and two of those are free. Brussels is a tiny town and we stopped by the Golden Eagle Country Store for pop and penny candy. There was a bluegrass band inside and we tapped our foot to the beat.
From there we drove through the beautifully undeveloped rural countryside to a cemetery.
It was such a lovely day, I even thought twice about urban living.
Henna Party
We invited Sister and Sister-in-law over for a henna party. We were even joined by a Sister's Sister-in-law visiting from Edmonton!
It seemed a tad complicated in the beginning, but we managed to figure it out. It turned out to be similar to real tattoos since it was addictive and we all ended up with more henna than we intended. It was fun and I look forward to doing it again soon...
Saturday, April 17, 2010
The Big Yellow Truck
Our brother-in-law and his Dad driving from Edmonton to Mexico to donate a fire truck.
http://thebigyellowtruck.blogspot.com/
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Saturday, April 10, 2010
Baby Camel


The new pedestrian bridge is coming along nicely. The zoo also plans to post a memorial plaque near the spot where a drunken driver struck and killed 7-year-old Luke Maue while he was on a field trip in 2001.
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Snuggle-Time With Judy
Crisis Nursery
The St. Louis Crisis Nursery is an independent, not-for-profit agency funded by donations and committed to preventing child abuse and neglect by providing short-term, emergency shelter for children, birth through age 12, whose families are faced with emergencies or who are in crisis.
There are several locations all over the metro area.
http://www.crisisnurserykids.com/Consider giving a bit of your time...
Stormy Tulips




Today it stormed and they all closed up. I love the raindrops on the delicate petals. The sun has been shining for an hour and I am sure they are starting to open again.
Redbud
More Spring
Friday, April 2, 2010
Blooms This Week
Hyacinth

Backyard Cherry Tree


In the midst of the terrible news i happened to read about Trenton, New Jersey today, i feel encouraged by the promise of rebirth that Spring brings.
Each day something new pops up. And because of Winter digging and overly ambitious squirrels, we have bulbs in random places.
The evil in this world is unimaginable. But the beauty is too...fitting for this Holy time.
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Mastodon State Historic Site
Evergreen Droplet

I'm not sure what this is...stunning in the rain.

We paid a visit to the museum at Mastodon this weekend and took a cool, rainy walk down to the Bone Bed. Bones of mastodons and other now-extinct animals were first found her in the early 1800's, including the giant ground sloth.
It certainly was interesting and I am glad we went. But the $4.00 per adult seems steep for what the museum offers. It isn't a "waste" of money. Think of it as a donation.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Surprise...
Field Trip


We spent time at the Butterfly House for a field trip this morning. There were over 4,000 butterflies and it felt surreal. Coupled with the heat and humidity, the boys left the place shirtless. Tullaia and I could've spent a bit more time just sitting and letting them flutter about. Perhaps another time.
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
St. Patrick's Day
We celebrated St Patrick's Day with our neighborhood parade that is sponsored by the Ancient Order of Hibernians. www.stlhibernians.org
For a more in-depth and interesting article on Dogtown click here.
Dogtown is an Irish neighborhood and several theories float around about the origin of the name. But according to Bob Corbett of the Dogtown Historical Society, the most plausible theory describes the way the landscape looked after rustic mining. They dug lots of holes with shovels. It looked like dogs dug them.
For a more in-depth and interesting article on Dogtown click here.
http://www.webster.edu/~corbetre/dogtown/origins-2.html



Beady Smiles

Fitting In Quite Well With the Party People

Ready to Go

Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Seeds

I am always amazed when things grow.
I love to watch the plants unfurl. When i walked downstairs last night i couldn't believe it. They grew inches in days!
We didn't end up buying vegetable seeds. We still had some left from overzealous seed purchases in 2002. So we took a chance and most of them came up. They were old and they still did their job. Wow, dedication.
We did buy some seeds from Baker's Creek though. http://rareseeds.com/
They are in Mansfield Missouri along with the Laura Ingalls Wilder Museum. That is also where Justin's people come from. Time for a country road-trip.
We Have A Graduate!
Thursday, March 4, 2010
Poem From a Friend
A friend sent this to me in response to my hermitage time...thank you Julie!
I will not die an unlived life. I will not live in fear of falling or catching fire. I choose to inhabit my days, to allow my living to open me, to make me less afraid, more accessible, to loosen my heart until it becomes a wing, a torch, a promise. I choose to risk my significance; to live so that which came to me as seed goes to the next as blossom and that which came to me as blossom, goes on as fruit. -Dawna Markova |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)