Archive for the ‘Family Album’ Category

Homeschooling High in the Thin Cold Air

January 28, 2010 - 10:31 pm No Comments

Life at 10,000 feet is not as bad as it sounds.  Breckenridge is a walkable town.  It very quaint with lots of little shops, cafe’s and museums depicting life in the mountainous frontier.  There are historical miner cabins everywhere.  It has been quiet and fun.

The boys ski four days a week – twice with a group and twice with an instructor.  They are doing great and really enjoying it.  On Tuesdays and Thursdays we spend all day covering all the basics — math, grammar, history, literature, Spanish, spelling and typing.  They also do a few pages of journal each week.

Thomas has read amazing books this school year for his online literature class: Call of the Wild, Kidnapped, The Yearling, A Christmas Carol, Around the World in 80 Days, The Jungle Book.  He is now reading Little Women, which he is beginning to like now, well into Chapter 6.  It seems the class has given him a good perspective on life in various parts of the world in the mid-1800’s to early 1900’s.  It has been fascinating watching him thoroughly enjoy historical fiction.

Gabo’s online lit class is a little easier.  He has read four books including The Chocolate Factory and Mary Poppins.  He is now reading The Hobbit and loving it.  As opposed to Thomas who has to answer a ton of comprehension questions and do quite a bit of writing for his class, Gabo has to do story boards and dioramas.

Math is going great.  They are both very good at it, so I have taken to giving them 3 -4 lessons daily, as long as they master the exercises.

We are also enjoying history quite a bit, with a lot of independent reading.  We have finally gotten to early American History and are learning all about the French and Indian Wars, the different Indian tribes and colonial America.

A few days ago we studied a little poetry, and they asked to read The Raven.  Turns out we ran into a huge Raven on Peak 7 who kept yakking back at us while we were skiing.  They had heard about the poen from a Simpson’s Halloween episode.

So we took a detour from grammar, and delved into The Raven, which was amazing.  We read all about Poe, and the many literary references in the poem.  We read about Lenore, and the variety of symbols he uses to set the mood.  We found an interactive site which highlighted many of these literary devices in various colors.  Then we watched the Simpsons’ episode, which was very funny and remarkably true to the original poem.  I have to admit it was one of my favorite homeschooling moments — they directed the whole experience and we were all learning so much.

When they get everything done I let them go out into town by themselves, which is a HUGE deal.  (For both of us!)  They love walking around town and running into people they know.  They seem to be quite popular on the mountain — they know all the ski patrol people, most of the instructors, and all the locals.  Whenever I run into them at lunch they are surrounded by people.  Sometimes when I’m on the chairlift I’ll hear someone scream – “Gabo!”

They seem to have befriended many of the local shopkeepers, and most of the shopkeepers dogs.  They even are allowed to walk certain dogs around the block.

At night, if it’s not too late, we curl up in the tiny living room and watch either Stargate or Chuck, a new show we have been following.  They love it.

We love life here.  It’s simple.  We all have three outfits and very little stuff.  Mom does a lot of cooking.  I made Captain Crunch French Toast today, with plenty of fresh strawberries and blueberries and whipped cream.

When we finally put them to bed, I am reading a few great books.  The surprise hit is a book about Richard J. Daley called American Pharaoh.  It is extremely well written and very interesting, with lots of background stories about his upbringing and the Chicago Democratic political machine in all its machinations.  I’ve also decided to leap forward a few years from the Founders and tackle the Civil War.  I found a book of 12 essays called Struggle for a Vast Future which has proven a good start.  Each essay is by a different historian and covers a different aspect of the war – from leadership, to soldiers, to espionage, military tactics – it’s been fascinating.  Of course I also have Sarah Palin’s book, which I am sure will be a little lighter than these, and a few others.  Rounding out my limited mountain library are two books about christianity and Funny in Farsi, about an Iranian woman’s experiences in American culture. My sister Juli thought I’d get a kick out of it as she thought about me when she read it.

Tio Juan Carlos is undergoing surgery in Argentina today.  He has prostate cancer and I am awaiting news from my mom who went down to take care of him.  Also, we are praying for our dear friend Miss Jeanne in Florida, who has developed severe back and leg pain and they have not been able to figure out why.  Rounding out our prayers is securing a husband for Miss Jo, our dear Breckenridge friend who has had trouble with immigration after having lived here in the winter for the past 15 years.

Living on a very tight budget can be extremely rewarding…  Really I think the key is plenty of comfort food, a close family, good books, a nice view, a fun kitty and good hiking boots.  Oh, and a fast internet connection!

You might be a redneck…

January 5, 2010 - 2:40 am No Comments

If you walk into the Cracker Barrel still wearing your neck pillow…

Winter Wonderland

December 31, 2009 - 11:15 am No Comments

Thomas having a little fun!

Bubble gum hazards

December 31, 2009 - 11:04 am No Comments
Ineffable Gabo

Ineffable Gabo

Swine flu shots, anyone?

November 16, 2009 - 12:09 pm No Comments

So the kids heard me make an appointment with the pediatrician to get them vaccinated for H1N1.  There were loud protests.  Thomas stated that he refuses to get any vaccine that has not been tested for at least three years.  “I don’t want to turn into a wetland-challenged mutant with a piggy nose!” he cried.

Saint Barack?

October 12, 2009 - 9:24 am No Comments

Recently we were having dinner with some friends and discussing the Pope’s decision to canonize five new mortals, to which Tommy seriously asked: Was Obama one of them?  From the mouths of babes…

I am Sarah Palin

October 6, 2009 - 10:22 pm No Comments

I am sometimes asked why I do not talk to my brother.  I only have one brother, and it would certainly be swell to have a relationship; to have my children have a cool uncle that would take them away from their tormenting parents and show them a good time.  Well, I cannot see that happening any time soon.  When you get to be middle aged, things start looking a little differently.  You really start weighing the effort versus the rewards.

I keep up with what Roger is doing through my parents and some friends.  Many follow him on Facebook.  I am not one to partake in social networking, so I can only see things through others’ access.  So once in a while I get to see Roger’s postings, or art.  I am sure this does not make a person, but for an artist, is it not the expression of his thoughts?  his beliefs?  his idiosincracies?  his voice?

So I have come to realize that to my brother, I am Sarah Palin.  When the left can articulate what is it about her that bothers them so much that’s when my brother and I may have a chance of having a relationship.  I know, hell will freeze over before that happens.  Is it that she’s not as bright as them?  Is it that she does not keep up with what journalist write about what’s going on?  Is it that she’s too good looking to be in her forties?  Could it be that she seems to be in love with her husband?  That she has a lot of kids and seems to care about them?  Is it that she chose to have a special needs child when she could/should have chosen to abort him?  Is it that her teenage daughter chose to keep her baby?  What is it exactly that pisses so many people off about this conservative woman from Alaska?

Some of these people are so rabid that it is impossible to have a conversation with them.  So why bother?  All you can do is pray that they will find something real to care about.  That they will get to experience love – what else is there – before our brief time on earth is gone.

I am not sure I can have a meaningful relationship with someone who has never had another human being completely dependent on them.  Who is obsessed with God, and with those who worship him, in such an unhealthy way.  Who puts himself front and center, the ultimate authority – the experiential artist, painting on a blank canvas. Mocking the petty simpletons who live God, family and country.

Gabo Having A Little Fun

June 13, 2009 - 3:01 pm No Comments

100_12941

Vegetable Gardening 101

May 5, 2009 - 9:10 am 1 Comment

The kids and I are researching how to grow vegetables in the Midwest. We are planning a garden and decided the library would be a good place to start. Thomas and Gabo talked to the librarian who directed them to the children’s gardening section and they promptly sat down to study their guides.

“I would like you to start taking notes about everything we need to know to grow our garden,” I said. So for the next half hour they were busy reading and writing.

After I put them to bed I decided to review their work. Thomas wrote: “Garden rosemary smells good, nice when attached to Christmas cards; sage good on top of chicken or pork; thyme is good in soup or in turkey or chicken stuffing; can be used as cough medicine; coriander or cilantro is good on hot dogs; sweet basil, you can make basil vinegar out of it; chives can be used in potato salads…”

Gabo also got a lot of good gardening tips: “Garden: What we need: soft soil, tomato bush seeds, cucumber bush seeds, lettuce, big rocks, lilypads, flowers, big long grass, and any type of fish, chives, potato, dill, cilantro, parsley, mint, onions, scallions, basil, green onions, corn, pumpkin, arctic lettuce, apple, beans, celery, carrots, watermelon…”

I guess our veggie garden will have some kind of pond in it and we will be doing a lot of cooking…”

Summer Shakespeare Study

May 4, 2009 - 4:54 pm No Comments

100_1365As we are finishing the Middle Ages, we have found that Shakespeare wrote plays about all these dubious characters we have been encountering in our studies. There is Richard III, Macbeth and Henry V, along with historical fiction such as the Merchant of Venice and Hamlet.

So we ventured into the library to find all kinds of interesting reads, as well as some animated movies about the plays. “We are going to do Shakespeare all summer,” I gleefully announced to my less than enthusiastic boys. “He is the most famous playwright in the world”.

To which Gabo sorrowfully replied: “I’d rather shake a spear all summer.”