Thursday, February 12, 2009

Blog Moving!

OK, y'all, I've had a bunch of people beta it, and the only browser having trouble is Explorer, which has trouble with all Blogger Beta blogs, AFAIK.  So, I am officially moving the blog to its new home:

Grassroots Homeschool

I'll leave Survive the Experience up for a while, but all my posts are already moved over, and I also migrated our posts from the farm blog, since we never post to it.  There's a link in the right-hand sidebar to the Local Harvest listing for the farmers' market where we sell our produce and eggs. 

Hope you like it!  Please talk it up/link to me/subscribe, if you don't mind, so that folks will pick up on the change.

Thanks,
Saille.
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Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Synchronicity



When I was in elementary school, the Tulsa paper put out an ad soliciting children to do book reviews on some of the kiddie lit. advance copies they received. I signed up. Initially, I wrote about the Chronicles of Narnia (to get my courage up), but I think I wrote two more, one on Hank the Cowdog, the other about The Boy and His Otter, by A.R. Lloyd. Unfortunately, although I loved the book, I lost track of my copy, and I don't know where any of my juvenile press clippings are. To complicate things, although I could picture the cover clearly, I'd forgotten the exact title and author. I've searched for it over the years, but never found it. I probably would have turned to Book Stumpers sooner or later.

In January, I visited my friend Tami in the Schenectady area, and we went to the Moon and River Cafe with our friend Cecile. They had several shelves of books, so while the mamas talked, our children browsed. After flipping through some sort of Wild Kingdom book, Will turned to cookbooks, and Posy rummaged on her own for a while. A few minutes later, I heard, "Mama, look at this one! It has an otter!" I looked up, and there it was. We bought it on the spot, and Posy and I are reading it now.

Sharing reading interests with the kids is one of my favorite things about being a mom. I love that one of my own children delivered this book back into my hands.

Friday, February 06, 2009

Lazy Days Skirt

I finished my first Lazy Days Skirt for Posy. It was a fairly quick project. I'd been hankering to do something with this Alexander Henry fabric, too.



It's very cute on her, but she got up on the wrong side of the bed the day I finished, so she didn't want to model. I'll catch her in it this spring, when she can't help kicking up her heels.

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

How's Your Feed?

You've gotta love it when they just shamelessly wave the elephant all around like this:

Tuesday, February 03, 2009

Candlemas/Imbolc

I'm going to have to settle on one or the other...I hadn't realized how many Catholic homeschoolers celebrate Candlemas, and I'm not actually sure that makes it easier to pick. It's nice to have a broad shorthand term, but on the other hand, I think our celebrations are somewhat different.



It was a really nice day. We made jar candles for our family altar. I forgot to teach the kids to backfill, but the candles still look good, and it won't hurt to save some skills for next year. I had some empty jars from Burt's Bees products that worked well as votive holders, and we simply used paraffin wax and crayons, melted in the toaster oven. We used prepackaged votive wicks. I'd have liked to do beeswax, but it's twice the price, so it will require some advance planning for next year. I'm hoping to find a local hobbyist beekeeper who will part with wax in barter. The rainbow candle was the kids' idea, a way of using the excess wax we'd have used for backfilling, if I'd remembered.



After the candle making was done, we read some stories and talked about the holiday. Then we made braided bread loaves. I love the recipe: it has tomato paste and Italian herbs in it, and an egg yolk wash makes it even more colorful. I have video Will took, but I think I need PB to edit it, b/c Graeme had again divested himself of clothing, and Will doesn't yet have the discernment as a cameraman to avoid that sort of thing.



The kids got art supplies as gifts...nice Faber Castell colored pencils. They crafted and watched Meet The Robinsons in the late afternoon...I'd expected that to be hokey, and had been avoiding it on Netflix, but it turned out to be wonderful and timely, for reasons I'll bring up again later. I worked on an embroidered hanging that was supposed to be done and hanging in honor of the holiday, but wasn't. The linen I'm using is thin, and I think I need some sort of stabilizing fabric on the back, but I settled for giving up the bullion knots and using satin stitch instead. When PB came home, we had a big baked pasta dish for dinner, with bread and salad, and we made Bananas Foster for dessert. The kids oohed and awed when we lit it.



Most of the activities we did this year are in Circle Round, which I'm assuming most interested parties already have, but if not, it's a wonderful book.

We held a short family ritual before bed, and talked about our well, and how we really can directly see and affect our water source, and why it's important. The kids were empowered and engaged. I think our at-home worship is falling into place. All in all, a great day.

Sunday, February 01, 2009

Yes, this.

These were the opening words at church today (the italics indicate congregational response):

We arrive out of many singular rooms, walking over the branching streets.

We come to be assured that brothers and sisters surround us, to restore their images on our eyes.

We enlarge our voices in common speaking and singing.

We try again that solitude found in the midst of those who with us seek their hidden reckonings.

Our eyes reclaim the remembered faces, their voices stir the surrounding air.

The warmth of their hands assures us, and the gladness of our spoken names.

This is the reason of cities, of homes, of assemblies in the houses of worship.

It is good to be with one another.

-Kenneth L. Patton
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Friday, January 30, 2009

Hopeful Signs

We went to see Inkheart  at our local movie theater today.  Afterward, we were at the bookstore, and just now I was on our library system's website, and you know what?  Guess which book is completely unavailable? 

Nope, not Inkheart.

Inkspell.  The sequel.
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