Weeks flying by,
Thanksgiving with friends,
Food, fun and laughter,
Girls full of plans,
spending the night, making movies, laughing into the wee hours.
Making Paper bowls
Little puppy
Weeks flying by,
Thanksgiving with friends,
Food, fun and laughter,
Girls full of plans,
spending the night, making movies, laughing into the wee hours.
Making Paper bowls
Little puppy
SIFAT is ìServants in Faith and Technologyî.† I had heard about them a couple of months ago and wanted to go on a field trip there so badly.† Then for November our Homeschool group planned a trip!!† I was so excited and signed up immediately.
As the day drew nearer I was less excited about being at a field trip at 9:00 am to a location 3 hours away!† I hemmed and hawed about it back and forth.† Kei and I went to youtube and searched for some videos and got excited and we made up our mind to go!† We planned to ride with Heather and her boys and made plans to meet them about 20 minutes from here.
After a few problems; waking up at 4:30!, dog trying to escape at 5:00 AM, Dr. Pepper exploding in kitchen, running late, Kei getting car sick and Heather not feeling well, getting lost a couple of times; we finally arrived at the SIFAT campus.
This is a Christian international organization that provides training to people from all over the world.† This training helps people meet basic needs such as food, water, shelter.† They have summer camps and day field trips and also train missionaries.
They have a global village where you can visit parts of Latin America, Africa and Asia.† They have a representation of homes of each area, along with flags, furniture, animals, etc.† It was truly amazing.
After meeting as a group in the Quonset Hut, we divided into smaller groups and went with our first leader.† Our first stop taught the kids how to make mud bricks.† This involved sifting the dirt, chopping straw, getting water from the stream and mixing all together.† Kei, Zach and J.J. didnít mind getting dirty at all!† Our guide told us that smoke inhalation from cooking fires was one of the leading causes of death among women and children in some of these countries!
Next we moved on the Uganda where we saw a waddle and daub house. They have no electricity or running water.† They have goats for milk.† Children start helping at a very young age.† They have storage ëwellsí to keep grain in.† Our guide told us to get the grain out someone has to actually go into the ëwellí and wait until someone pulls them out.† We also learned about the rocket stove.† These are easy to construct, with low-cost materials. These are low-mass stoves designed to burn small pieces of wood very efficiently. Cooking is done on top of a short insulated chimney.† The people of Uganda keep goats for milk and food.
Next stopÖthe slums. These slums were not indicative of any one place; there are slums all over the world, even in the United States. They are made from whatever can be found.† We saw old tires, pieces of cardboard, old couches, doors, bed pieces, anything they can find.† We learned about dirty water and what a huge problem it is for so many places in the world.† She told us how people die from diarrhea all over the world.† They get parasites and get dehydrated.† †We learned 3 ways to purify water.† The first uses a car battery, salt and water to produce ëchlorineí that purifies.† The second was using a mixture of rocks, gravel and sand that filters the water into drinkable water.† The one that surprised me the most was using solar power.† Just fill up a plastic water bottle and leave in direct sunlight for at least 6 hours.† This makes the water 98.99% purified!
We then moved to Bolivia which we loved!† There was a guide who had actually spent 10 years in Bolivia. He had a guinea pig in a cage which he said that families ate! The people who live in the Southern part of the country, which is in the mountains, have a hard life.† They live in circular rock huts with thatched roofs that are extremely small and cramped. They surround their huts with goats to help keep the hut warm.† They father and sons would go work in the field while the mothers and children would tend to the house.† They would cook breakfast and lunch at the same time.
We then went for lunch.† Kei found a dog to pet.
Guatemala was next.† This was very cool because Sophia, who was cooking, was originally from Guatemala.† They explained the entire process of making tortillas.† First you have to grow the corn, then harvest and let the kernels dry.† Then the kernels are removed and it is boiled in a mixture of water, lime and ash.† This produces hominy! The outer shell is then removed and the inside is ground to a flour consistency by hand.† You then have Mesa flour and you make your dough and roll a section into a ball and press on a tortilla press.† Then they are fried on a cast iron griddle.† It just amazed me since the hardest part of OUR tortilla shopping is which kind to buy.† We take so much for granted.
Kei got picked to actually make a tortilla.
Then we went to the rope bridge.† This was unlike any rope bridge I had ever seen!† It had a single, very thick rope going across with runners coming up from it.† The guide told us that even llamas crossed the bridges!† We tried to convince him to let us go get the goat to experiment but he nixed that idea.† Zachary is afraid of heights and I was so proud of him for making it across.† Kei had no qualms and just took off.† I wasnít afraid but it was harder than it looked.† I think the fact that I had on big, clunky boots may have had something to do with it!† All of our group crossed and we were very proud of ourselves.
Our last stop was the Philippines where the homes are constructed of bamboo. They were very cool and felt like a tree house because they are raised off the ground by stilts.† Bamboo is everywhere in the Philippines and it was on the walls and floor and even the furniture was made from Bamboo.
There are 7,000 islands in the Philippines but only about 1000 are inhabited.† The other 6000 island are under water when the tide rises.† Definitely a deterrent to living there!†† After we explored the house and discovered that the Philippines way to greet someone is to shake hands, touch your forehead to their hand and vice versa and say, ìMay God go with you and bless youî we went outside for a demonstration of tinikling.
This is the native dance of the Philippines.†† First they learned how to move the sticks and then Kei was picked to TinikÖumm to tinikling?† She was pretty good at it.† She tried to get me to try but visions of broken bones as I slammed to the ground prevented that.
It was just an amazing day.† The best field trip ever.† I truly left feeling I had visited, if only briefly, all of these places.† Kei and I talked about how lucky we are, how hard people have it.† The lifestyles that are so foreign and difficult for us to imagine.† I roll out of bed and grumble at my few measly chores I have.† I cannot imagine living like these people. SIFAT is doing an astonishing job of improving their health, the way they do work, and their very way of living.† I admire them so very much and pray that their good works continue.
I wish everyone I knew could experience SIFAT, it was that moving and heart wrenching.† It makes me want to do something, anything.† I told Kei this morning that the money we blow at Wal-Mart a couple of times a week could change these peopleís lives.† God bless the people of SIFAT and the wonderful work they are doing.
Be a blessing ,
A pessimist, they say, sees a glass of water as being half empty; an optimist sees the same glass as half full. But a giving person sees a glass of water and starts looking for someone who might be thirsty. – G. Thomas Gale
Hunger allows no choice
To the citizens or the police;
We must love one another or die. ~W.H. Auden
We live such a calm life.† Our series at church has focused on stress and how stressful our lives can be.† Our lives just aren’t.† Don’t get me wrong, there are days we want to kill each other, there are tears and yelling at times.† There are times we have too much scheduled and not enough time to do it all.† There are days when I am trying to do invoicing and Kei doesn’t understand something and we both get frustrated with each other.† There are days when I don’t know if I am coming or going.† But all of this is the exception rather than the rule.
We don’t wake up to the screaming of an alarm clock.† We don’t have to rush around gathering clothes and books and lessons to get out the door for school.† There are no fights about what to wear or “why didn’t you make my favorite lunch”?† We wake up slowly most mornings.† Sometimes the birds wake us up, sometimes I tickle her awake, sometimes it is the crazy dog but rarely is it an alarm clock.† We eat when we are hungry, we talk when we have something to say, we laugh as loud as we want, we act silly and dance around.† Our life is not frantic.† I think most people live such frantic lives.
If Kei is tired of doing Math she takes a break.† If she doesn’t really want to do this lesson today, we postpone it until the next day and do something else.† It is a simple life that fits us both like a glove.
That being said; this is what we did the last few days.
Kei wanted to make Banana pudding. I have never made banana pudding so we asked around.† Some of our favorite ladies at our local grocery store told us to use the recipe on the back of the Vanilla Wafer box so that is what she used.
She made a flower puzzle for me to put together.† It turned out really cool.
Brit came over for a while today and they decided to RAKE!† and rake…and they are still raking.
I asked them what they were going to do with the leaves when they were finished playing and they said ‘Huh”?† So my visions of a leave free yard is just that…a vision.† Actually I like the leaves in the yard.† I am sure when my Daddy lived here he raked them as soon as they fell.† Crunching leaves are one of my favorite sounds.
Here are some of the sites we played on this week.
ìPeace is not a relationship of nations. It is a condition of mind brought about by a serenity of soul. Peace is not merely the absence of war. It is also a state of mind. Lasting peace can come only to peaceful people.î ~Jawaharlal Nehru
We didn’t do a ton of ‘lessony’ things this week.† Yes I know ‘lessony’ isn’t a word!† But it is my blog and I can make up words if I want to!
We had begun an experiment on mummified apples.† You can find the details here. One week ago Kei started the experiment.
Seven days later..[give or take a day]
She discovered that the salt did the best and the baking soda/Epsom salt mixture did the worst.
Here is a quick rundown on some of the things we did this week.
Monday
Copy Work
Math Subtracting fractions
Watched King Tut’s Final Secrets and discovered that King Tut died from a battle wound.† This was a fascinating documentary!!
Made world map
Wrote in blog
Made Banana bread
Spent time here
Read Ivy and Bean and Harry Potter Goblet of Fire
Of course I HAD to show her Steve Martin’s “King Tut”. 🙂
Worked on play <wrote, directed, acted, edited>
Tuesday
Copy Work
Wrote in blog
Did some Egyptian Math
Subtracting Fractions with lower fractions
Worked on play <wrote, directed, acted, edited>
Wednesday
Copy Work
Egyptian Math
Critical Thinking WS <deductive reasoning, directions, planning>
Read Snap and Goblet of Fire
Played Spliterature
Worked on play <wrote, directed, acted, edited> This was set in the 1960’s.† She wore a Leave it to Beaver dress and pearls.† I just cracked up.† Daddy has an old rotary phone and she loves playing with it.† She set my Iphone for ‘old fashioned’ phone for the ringing.
Listened to Beethovenís Wig http://www.amazon.com/Beethovens-Wig-Sing-Along-Symphonies/dp/B000060OLA
Watched the Top 10 King Tut videos on the web http://heritage-key.com/blogs/malcolmj/top-10-best-king-tut-videos-web
Physics ñ Mass, inertia, movement
Thursday
Critical thinking worksheets
Ran errands/bought groceries
Edited play
Watched King Tut DVD We are now officially experts on King Tut!
Chan spent the night which meant playing, exploring, talking, laughing, watching TV, eating lots of Halloween candy and more.
Collected creek water and examined it under microscope.
Checked and compared apple slices from Mummy experiment
Read Snap
Put on Webkinz play
Finger knitted with loops and yarn.† She loves doing this!† She has made purses, hats, scarves, bracelets, pom pom’s and more!
Today we had our homeschool Skate Day.† We always have such fun there!
Tomorrow is supposed to be COLD!† We intend on staying in and doing a lot of nothing!
“The child who attends public school typically spends approximately 1,100 hours a year there, but only twenty percent of these — 220 — are spent, as the educators say, ‘on task’. Nearly 900 hours, or eighty percent, are squandered on what are essentially organizational matters.” -Homeschooling For Excellence
She must learn percentages, decimals and† fractions
History facts, dates, chemical reactions.
Science she must fully grasp,
Molecules and atoms and chemical mass.
She must learn to comprehend what she reads,
Biology, nature, birds and seeds.
Punctuation, adverbs, adjectives and such,
Some days it can be a little too much.
So… just as important are days such as these,
When we laugh and giggle and play in the leaves.
And bake banana bread, dress up and sing.
And know all the joys that homeschooling can bring.
Please, let them be little,
‘Cause they’re only that way for a while.
Give them hope, give them praise,
Give them love every day.
Let ’em cry, let ’em giggle,
Let ’em sleep in the middle,
Oh, but let them be little.
~Billy Dean
What a last few days we have had!
Thursday we went to the Story-Telling Festival in Athens.† It was so great.† We both love story tellers and it is quickly becoming a lost art.
Kei made Halloween outfits for some of her Webkinz.† She did a great job!
Thursday night we went to my sister-in-laws school Fall Festival.† Kei and I had a blast.
I work from home.† My boss has been in Atlanta filming Last Valentine.† He surprised Kei and I by stopping by on the way to LA.† It was so great to see him.† He is an awesome boss.† We took him to Cracker Barrel and he was amazed by how much food they brought us.† 🙂
Halloween afternoon my brother called and told us that my nephew had been attacked by wild dogs.† We went to the ER and saw him.† He ended up with 32 stitches!† I felt so angry and sad.† I can’t believe people let big dogs run wild.† Seth had a pocket knife and fended them off with that!
This is my brother’s scarecrow.† Isn’t it awesome?
Kei carved the pumpkin Halloween afternoon.† I don’t do carving.† If you know me you understand why.
Nomad was a pirate.† For about 10 minutes.
Halloween night we went trick or treating with our friends.† Kei was a punk, black cat.† She looked awesome!
We went over to Gina’s and then to Cathy’s neighborhood to trick or treat.
Except for Seth, it was a great week.† Today is November 1st.† I can’t wait to see what great adventures lie ahead for this month!
“Two sounds of autumn are unmistakable, the hurrying rustle of crisp leaves blown
along the street or road by a gusty wind, and the gabble of a flock of migrating geese.
Both are warnings of chill days ahead, fireside and topcoat weather.”
~ † Hal Borland
We have both been sick since last week.† I hate being sick.† My Mother used to say, “I am sick to death of myself” when she was sick and I know the feeling!† We didn’t do very much the past 8 days but we did manage to sneak in a little fun.
I took Kei on a ride to the 1st elementary school I went to.† I went there from 1st-middle of 3rd grade.† As we walked around the playground I remembered a few stories to tell her.† She loves to hear about ‘when I was little’.
We had fun wandering around.† I even took her to our old house, pulled into the driveway, then backed up and showed her how Mother would take us to school.
We made crystals last week.† The recipe can be found here.
It took about 5 days and the results were really pretty.† Kei wants to make more.
Even though Kei and I felt horrible this past weekend, I wanted her to take Nomad out and play in the leaves for a few minutes.† I knew it was supposed to rain and they would be all wet and soggy.
We decorated our table for Fall.
Our Roamschool group had a Halloween party at Cathy’s house.† It was a blast as usual.† A great HS group is my #1 advice for anyone homeschooling.† Cathy and Kaitlin went all out for the food!
The kids had a blast.† We had tornado warnings all day and they were inside and outside. They would come running in when they heard the tornado warning horns.† We live in Alabama, we are used to tornados.† We don’t take cover until we see the funnel cloud. 🙂
All of the Moms had a blast too [and Bobby] We laughed and ate and watched Dan the Weather Guy [we missed you Suz!!].
On the way home we saw the coolest mailbox and had to take a picture.
We ran by Books a Million [and ran into Heather and gang] for Kei to get the Red Panda Webkinz she has been saving up for.† She named her Lietus which is Latvian for ‘rain’.† Latvian??? Where does she come up with this stuff???
Hope everyone has a wonderful, spooky Halloween week!
Be blessed,
‘Tis now the very witching time of night,
When churchyards yawn and hell itself breathes out
Contagion to this world.
~William Shakespeare
It has been a great week.† After the busyness of the last 2 weeks we just relaxed at home for the most part.
I had seen this really cool project that Kei wanted to try.† I didn’t have exactly the right material but that has never stopped me before!† It would have done better with 100% cotton because Kei’s† hammering knocked holes in the material.
We love Halloween and Kei got into the Halloween spirit this week.
We went to the Halloween Store so she could pick out her costume.† This year she wanted to ‘be something really Evil.”
She found something that she like and while I don’t want to give it away here she did practice with a little makeup when we got home.
She just can’t do evil. 🙂
She found a really cool feather this week which she called The Yin Yang feather.
And made her hammock swing into a hammock ‘chair’ swing which she has always wanted.
Somehow we have become the co-owner to ANOTHER dog.† He is a beautiful Golden Retriever that lives next door but digs under the fence to our house daily.
I am reading The Odyssey to Kei as our night time book.† We are both loving it but we are both mythological, fantasy kinda girls.† It is a children’s version but I am really enjoying it too.
Today we went swimming with HS friends at the indoor pool and afterward the kids decided to swing.
Livvy is spending the night with Kei and I am making Stone Soup. Yummy!
Happy weekend,
Dreams surely are difficult, confusing, and not everything in them is brought to pass for mankind. For fleeting dreams have two gates: one is fashioned of horn and one of ivory. Those which pass through the one of sawn ivory are deceptive, bringing tidings which come to nought, but those which issue from the one of polished horn bring true results when a mortal sees them.† ~ Homer, The Odyssey
Our Botanical Gardens had a Chunkin’ Pumpkin event this week.† They had a trebuchet and everyone got a pumpkin to ‘launch’.† It sounded fun so off we set. When we got inside I had realized I had forgotten my money!† Kei said to run back and get it and she would wait ‘on the hill’.
Kei picked out just the right pumpkin.
Then we waited on Suz and kids.† We didn’t want to chunk without them!
There was a guy dressed in period clothes in the field.† The goal was to smash the pumpkin into his body, preferably his head I think!
We stood and watched kid after kid launch their pumpkins.† Some came really close.† Emily and Zach both went and then it was Kei’s turn. They placed the pumpkin on the trebuchet and she pulled the cord.
Her pumpkin went STRAIGHT UP!† And…STRAIGHT DOWN! I was so surprised I didn’t even get a picture.† It almost took out the crowd!!† Kei was a bit surprised too!† What happened was a screw flew off and broke the arm of the trebuchet.† It was funny but it could have been people with bruised bodies and pumpkin guts on their heads!
After the chunking we went to watch a fencing exhibition.† On the way Kei had to pose with a woman dressed up as Susan from Narnia.
Emily and I sat and oohed and aahed over the boots.† We both love us some leather medieval boots!† I was sitting there and someone sat beside me.† It was Tonya who has been my ‘online’ friend for over a year but I have never met face to face.† I was so excited!!!† She is as awesome as I knew she would be.† I first discovered her because her family were in North Alabama and they were an RVing family.† That is something I have always wanted to do!† I followed her adventures for months and then we became FB friends.† Her family has actually moved into a house now.† Her blog, Live the Adventure, is awesome and worth checking out.† I still can’t believe she just came and sat down.† I would have recognized her from her pictures.† Isn’t the internet just the coolest thing?
Kei found a rock yesterday that was too awesome.† A† heart rock.
Today we went to see “Little Women”.† It was being performed at the Fine Arts Center in a town near us.† Before we left I had to take a couple of pictures of Kei in our yard.† See the pumpkin next to her.† Well we think it is a pumpkin, it is pink!† It was so unusual we had to buy it.
When we got there they had pushed the time forward an hour so we set off to wander around downtown.† It is such a sweet little town.† We love exploring in the older parts of towns.† She wanted to go into every shop.† At one point I was like….”Umm Kei that is a tanning salon”.
The play was great!† We both enjoyed it so much.
After the play our dear friend Shane came out to talk to us.† He was Laurie and he was magnificent!
What a great week.† October is such an awesome month.† There are so many festivals and events going on.† We try to cram everything into the Fall before it gets so cold and I HIBERNATE!
This weekend is supposed to be a final hurrah to summer with temps around 90∞.† Enjoy.
All those golden autumn days the sky was full of wings. Wings beating low over the blue water of Silver Lake, wings beating high in the blue air far above it . . . bearing them all away to the green fields in the South.
– Laura Ingalls Wilder
The weather has finally gotten cooler.† Give me a week or so and I will be complaining about how cold it is!
We had our friends over for lunch last week.† There were about 20 people here and we had a blast.† I made my version of Moe’s burritos with chicken or beef, rice, black beans, homemade salsa, sour cream, cheese, lettuce and wraps of many flavors.† Very good.
Kei has been collecting acorns from our trees.† There are thousands!!!
We had our 2nd Skate Day and there were, once again, tons of people. Kei took a bunch of knitted items and made $7.50!† She was so excited.
Chan and Ben came home with us for a few days while Esther surprised Matt with a romantic getaway.† Jake joined us on Saturday night and we had a blast with our new big family.
Monday we went to a working farm with our Homeschool Group.† We† had so much fun.† It was a beautiful day!† The family does organic farming and we learned so much about that.† The kids all planted their own lettuce to bring home.† Kei’s dream is to live on a farm.† Yesterday made her realize just how much work that involves!
We saw cows, sheep, llamas, chickens, bunnies, kitties and more.
Kei was delighted with the llamas.† Of course, “she wants one.”
A great week in God’s beautiful world.
Be blessed,
I love to think of nature as an unlimited broadcasting station, through which God speaks to us every hour, if we will only tune in.† ~George Washington Carver