Wednesday 27 August 2008

Pow, pow and erm Splash!

After reading blueyonders blog which i love as she has got a wonderful outlook on family life i read her rubber band gun tutorial and showed it to my boys and partner, they loved the idea so off we went to the wood shop and my youngest eyes filled with delight as he looked around at washers, bits of wood and door locks!, he was amazed that his pocket money could buy loads of things to make from the woodworkers, a lot more than spending it on one toy in town. I was thrilled at this news as you can imagine. So with our wood and glue we went in search of rubber bands, this is crazy but at our local shops there was none to be found, but the great man from the cheaper market shop came to our rescue as he had thrown out loads the day before, we got a great stash of them and went home. The boys sanded the cut wood pieces even though they insisted they wouldn't get splinters if they left them! yeah right!


The boys happily chatting and sanding, the eldest in front of pic decided to make a cross bow out of pieces of laminate flooring and to my surprise made one all by himself and it worked really well.



Chris the youngest waiting for his daddy to nail the wood together "how long will it take". After waiting for the glue to dry and asking every few minutes "is it ready yet?" and me explaining to the boys how wonderful it is to spend £3.00 on wood etc and make 3 rubber band guns that they could have endless fun with rather than spending more money on one toy that will be put in a toy box forgotten for the rest of time to them, they were finally ready. We set up a cardboard target for them to fire at and away they went, they played in the garden laughing and praising each other (something that rarely goes on) for hours, oh the joy!
Then disaster, i should of seen it coming really,Chris was on a chair (a big leather heavy chair i might add) behind the target (this also was large so no chance of him being hit) when his biggest brother went to get his bands and bumped into the target which in turn knocked the chair and Chris over right into the pond! He came out looking like a swamp monster, wet through dripping in pond weed with his gun held up above his head - the only thing apart from his head that was dry! Quick rush to the bath and antiseptic on his grazes, he bashed up his arm and side pretty badly on the rocks.


Here he is after his hot chocolate showing me his grazes (note the dry rubber band gun on the sofa!) He was still cheery though even though in his words "i nearly drowned to death, but i save my gun". Now a week later all band are lost over next doors fence, in the bushes full of spiders- i wont be getting those! and up the hoover probably!




Sunday 24 August 2008

High on a hill stood a lonely goat herd......

I adore Julie Andrews, love Mary Poppins and the Sound of Music, have both soundtracks on vinyl and bore my kids to death singing songs from both movies. So imagine my delight when I came across this video on another blog , it combines both Julie Andrews and the all time classic the Muppet's!! yippee, guess what I will be enduring my boys to when they come in from playing soldiers in the garden!

Saturday 23 August 2008

lovely things to make you smile....

Shinzi Katoh is a Japanese Zakka artist of worldwide acclaim. He is based in Aichi in the central region of Japan where he has his own gallery, shop and museum. His designs are whimsical, childlike and gorgeous! All of his products are designed to be practical but also to make you smile and feel happy – that is the central theme of Zakka design and art. Now in the UK to buy online is this fantastic, cute, wonderfully glorious site . I want one of everything and normally when browsing all things lovely there are only one or two items that catch my eye, but this site is different everything i looked at made me coo with joy!
Look at the water bottles, how delightful! There are pack lunch boxes, glasses in all sizes, notepads, sticky tape, bags now on half priced sale , cups with little biscuit holders on top and a whole load of other things to dream over.

I really want the teapot and the lunchbox above, hopefully i can save up some pennies to treat myself to them or better still ask for them at christmas!

Friday 22 August 2008

ARGH bloody slugs!

growing veg has become a passion of mine since trying to become more self sufficient, my garden is not huge and not very tidy but slowly it is becoming better, I'm having lots of ideas and thoughts about what to plant next, and each morning i go out and proudly look at my growing beauties! My runner beans have sprouted up to epic proportions, wrapping themselves around the bamboo wigwams i made, the carrots are almost ready for harvesting and the radishes, well they keep disappearing, those damned slugs!!, I'm becoming obsessed checking morning and night to catch the blighters and keep them from munching my veggies. The lettuces and radishes vanished after a couple of days, we tried the egg shell thing - didn't work, now we have tied copper wiring around to see if this works, it better do or i will be out there with a torch doing night duty!! Any ideas not involving jam jars and beer will be most grateful.On the upside, i got a £15 greenhouse in a sale and the whole family helped put it up in the pouring rain just to make me happy - how lovely! So after slug watch as the kettle boils in a morning, sometimes still in my PJ's i open up the greenhouse and an excited calm comes over me whilst i look at every tiny growing shoot, i know the tomatoes above are still small but i was late planting them anyway i don't care to much as they are growing quite quickly. The label on the side is not in case i forget what they are, its for the boys, it has some facts and tips on it.

Here is chris' (9 yr old) spinach, he only eats spinach and lettuce and the odd carrot and maybe a pea if he is feeling adventurous, so he planted these spinach above and lettuce below pics. This is his second lot of lettuces after the first slug theft we thought it best to keep them in the greenhouse until they are well established.

Turnips! tiny little ones just starting off, I'm waiting till they are a bit bigger to thin them out, to be honest we don't eat turnip that often so i thought it was a good idea to grow some, plus i think they are quite funny! I have been watching carol Klein's programme on BBC2 grow your own veg i love her enthusiasm and passion, its a great programme and she has a fab book too, really easy to follow for beginners like me.

As a family we already do the Eco things like riding our bikes everywhere, we don't have a car through choice, we recycle and reuse, i always say no to plastic bags, we buy as much fair trade and organic food as possible and growing fruit and veg has made me feel so much better not just because its fresher and better for us but because i am proud to see the little seeds turn into lovely plants and bear tasty fruit and veg and to see the boys faces when a new bud appears or how much something seems to grow overnight, its amazing.

Wednesday 13 August 2008

mucky boys and pretty flowers

I just adore flowers and our lovely local park is abundant with them at this time of year, they have a wonderful flower garden area with two ponds and beds full of beautiful flowers, the smell is wonderful, such a mix of roses, lavender, rudbeckia, foxgloves, echinacea, lily pads, water iris and many more.

The boys also love going to this part of the park for pond dipping, they have seen amazing dragon flies, pond skaters, frogs and newts and they love collecting them in water bottles and bringing some home to our garden pond, here are the three of them happy with their new "friends" on the way out of the park.

All good fun and best of all free - we like that! Also free but rather messy and something else the boys love doing is collecting motor bike boxes from the motor bike shop at the top of our road, the owner Robin is a great man and lets the boys have all sorts of treasure, boxes, bubblewrap, tyres etc. So they often go and get one of these boxes, they are huge and i normally have to give them a hand carrying it back down the road, then we struggle to get it through the house to the garden if its sunny, if not it turns into a walk through in the hall or a rather dangerous slide on the stairs! This day though it went in the garden, i cut windows out of it and the boys set about painting it in green emulsion

Hers Adam looking strangly clean (although he did have it in his hair) half way through painting the outside.


And Chris the rather messier one of the two mixing it up with green and black paint for an army feel.
Mmm, i can see now this was early on in the process, he got covered by the end of it, the bath water resembled the pond minus newts!








Sunday 3 August 2008

Homeschool, Q & A.

Im Just Saying wrote a blog post asking homeschoolers to answer some questions about homeschooling so today i will attempt to answer them even though we have only been homeschooling since april/may this year.

1. What was your motivation for homeschooling? Was it based on religious reasons? Was is it based on curriculum - did you want more freedom in choosing what your children were being taught? Was it based on socializing - wanting to have more control in the people with whom your children came into contact with? Was it based on logistics - the nearest school being 20 miles away? What made you finally decide to go this route?

We thought given the choices around our area for schools are poor and that the school the boys attended was not very good as there are many unsavoury children/parents that go there and we didnt want the boys in contact with such people, that in the holidays the boys became much brighter, happier children that we would not send them back to school. My eldest does attend school and i hope for the younger two to go to high school, so my ideas on homeschooling are not set in stone, its just whats best for us all at the moment.

2. Don't hate me for asking this. How to you handle socialization? What steps do you take to make sure your children are around other children and adults? Are you active in a home school group? Do you spend a lot of time at church activities? Maybe you utilize the local Y for activities and they meet friends there?

Where we live there are many children the boys play with every day and they have friends who come round too. We have just started to have meet ups with other homeschool families in the area. We dont go to church and the boys dont attend any clubs.

3. Do you use the public school system for any part of your child's routine? Some children here come to the school for band or chorus, or maybe for science class. Do you send your child to the public school to take advantage of any of their programs?

No as this would go against the belief i have about them mixing with unsavory children.

4. Do your children begin and end school at the same time each day? Do they have a strict schedule, at least as far as waking up and reporting to the school area of your home? If not, when/how will you transition your children into following a more rigid schedule - awaking at the same time each day so that they can follow a routine outside of the home like for college and work?
No, they dont have a set routine, we learn as we go through out the day naturally. They do have some time to do worksheets and spelling tests but this is not at any special time.
The boys will be well equipped with life skills enough to be able to follow a stricter routine if need be when they are older, just because they dont have to do things at a certain time they still have routine in other areas of there life like mealtimes and bed etc.


5. How many spelling bees has your child won? Oh, I'm kidding. We all know most of the recent national spelling bee winners have been home schooled children. I just wanted to throw a little funny in there.
We dont have spelling bees in the UK

6. Do you have a sense of humor? It's probably a little late for me to ask that but...
Oh god yeah a very big one and i think us homeschoolers have bigger ones than most parents.

How does a homeschooler change a lightbulb?
First, mom checks three books on electricity out of the library, then the kids make models of light bulbs, read a
biography of Thomas Edison and do a skit based on his life.
Next, everyone studies the history of lighting methods, wrapping up with
dipping their own candles.
Next, everyone takes a trip to the store where they
compare types of light bulbs as well as prices and figure out how much change they'll get if they buy two bulbs for $1.99 and pay with a five dollar bill.
On the way home, a discussion develops over the history of
money and also Abraham Lincoln, as his picture is on the five dollar bill.
Finally, after
building a homemade ladder out of branches dragged from the woods, the light bulb is installed.
And there is light.

7. Where do you find your curriculum? Do you shop for it and order it? Do you create your own?
We dont follow the curriculum but i do get worksheets from Enchanted learning, its just £10.00 a year.

8. Do you have any worries at all about teaching your teenagers the higher level math and sciences? I, for one, could not teach chemistry to my children but I could probably teach them calculus. Is this a concern for you?
Not really as i hope when they are that age they will be attending high school

9. What bothers you the most about the reputation home schoolers have? What things do you hate to hear people say about you for your choice? I really hope you don't say that it's my previous post.
I hate the way people feel the need to quiz my boys to see if they actually know anything, also the way they want a full commentry about what educational thing you have done that day and also and this is the worse one the way other non home ed parents ask how do you cope having them at home all day and then add "it would drive me mad"

10. Be honest, do you, at least in your mind sometimes, judge those of us who choose public school? Do you ever think we are making a bad choice for our children? Are you vocal about that disapproval?
Not at all everyone has a choice and thats up to them.