In Honor of Earth Day – a garden of love and friendship

This has been the first time in our 16 years of marriage that we have had a yard!  We apartment dwellers decided it was time for some grounding!  I have a feeling that there will be no turning back henceforth!

IMG_0995So here is the front yard when we first moved in:Front yard

 

 

To this:

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first backyardThe back yard went from looking like this to as it looks now.

We hoped to cover the mossy concrete with dirt.  Instead we got ripped off with a little clay soil and a truck load of rocks!

 

IMG_9756But it slowly began to take shape – my green thumbed mother drew me up a plan and got me on the road with my first bunch of plants.

IMG_9904Lii helped me muscle in the stones – we were sore for days – she more than I!  (Just for the record, I  didn’t boss her as much it appears – we kind of posed! She might disagree!)

 

IMG_0342IMG_0348Dolphin came to give me a literal hand and dug out rocks so we could put in vegetable plots in the back yard.

One neighbor let me use his extra bricks and my other neighbor let me take my pick of cuttings from her garden.

Seema, then stepped in and helped me dig up dirt and lug it to my soil starved yard.  She also helped me lay bricks to reserve the soil for the plants and not the path.  (I lament that we did not take pictures!)

IMG_0335Awesome birthday gifts allowed for purchase of pots and tools – thanking Treas and Lii!

IMG_0355IMG_0358IMG_1038IMG_1039The kiddie-roo’s were inspired and helped me paint the pots and rig the bird bath.  Unfortunately, we realized that the white was too startling for the birds and so we decided to go earthy and improvise some terracotta pots and a basin into an eco-friendly bird bath.  Incidentally, Ria spotted a pretty Bee Eater perched on the rim of the bird bath this morning and also an interesting bug that looked like it was wearing socks!

IMG_0994IMG_0998IMG_0992I had no idea I could fall in love with dirt – but I have!  There is something so incredibly therapeutic about rooting around in the soil.   Somehow planting, tending and watching life unfold brings so much beauty and joy.  I find myself waiting to finish school and chores so I can work in the yard!

IMG_0973IMG_1028IMG_0982We’ve harvested my spinach and amaranth twice already and are looking forward to tomatoes and musk melons.  I think my garden will look even better and yield a lot more next season (which will have to be after the monsoons – when we return from the US).  I am still very much a green horn!  I must admit it was hard not to fantasize about Home Depot and Lowes!  Still I thought we did pretty well considering!  What’s not to love in a garden made with friends?  Happy Earth Day!  Thank you Ma and all my friends!

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Surprising Backyard Finds and Keeps!

If you have never read Anna Botsford Comstock’s brilliant chapter on cats in her Handbook of Nature Study, I highly recommend it!  Not only does she cover the information in a most engaging manner but she also provides many thought provoking questions for observation.

A few months ago, we discovered, much to our surprise that a cat had birthed a litter right in our own backyard!  Eventually, Mama cat carried each of her young to a safer place, since our backyard is frequented by our neighbors’ pet dogs who are excellent watchdogs and not in the least partial to the feline species!

The mother cat (whom Ria named Cassie) was extremely wary and although grateful for what we fed her, was particularly fearful of Adam, who, to be honest, was only sympathetic to the cat because of her having birthed the kittens in our yard.  He strongly avowed to NOT being a ‘cat person’ having grown up with dogs most of his life.

IMG_0298Needless to say, he gradually won her confidence and now not only does she eat right from his hand, but she will first affectionately purr and rub against his ankles before she partakes of her food!  Of course the big surprise was the dramatic change  in Adam, who discovered that the ‘cat person’ had surprisingly emerged in him, despite his adamant stand (pun intended!)

Of all the four kittens, it appears that only one survived.  When he was eventually strong enough to follow his mother, he was extremely skittish and fearful, bolting at the slightest movement or sound.  Brandon noticed a white stripe on the top of his brown patched back and named him Stripe. IMG_0640

True to Anna B. Comstock’s very entertaining narrative on cats, Stripe not only gained confidence but actually proved very intelligent.   He knows he is not allowed beyond a certain boundary and I don’t have to say “No” more than once!  He is also extremely curious!   They truly do have away of acknowledging their gratitude and sometimes come just for ‘loving,’ almost tripping us up in the process.  It is very difficult when you have a cat weaving in and around your feet while you work in the kitchen!  Both mother and son have endeared themselves to us. They visit at three strategic times in the day and now we save all our meat scraps and even purchase some raw chicken meat for them!  Occasionally the cat cuffs Stripe on the ear when he gets too greedy for his own good but it is quite a delight to watch them stretch themselves on the door step or in the yard, contented, especially after a nice saucer of creamy milk.  It almost seems as if they have claimed us as theirs as well!IMG_0353

It has made for every interesting and pleasurable nature study not just for the children but for us parents too!

Cassie and Stripe are definitely part of the family now!

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An Outdoors Expedition with Rahul Alvares

Trying to get a hold of ‘Birds of Goa’ led me right to the photographer of the book, wildlife expert, Rahul Alvares.

We decided to do something special and ask Rahul to guide us through a birdwatching, woods exposure, herping trip.  Herping, he said was best in the monsoons but he would be willing to take us birdwatching and show us some of the snakes he had recently rescued from various homes before releasing them in the wild.

It was still dark when we set out for North Goa.  We could see the faintest touch of dawn in the eastern sky and by the time we reached Porvorim, the sun was out in all it’s bright, Goa splendor!

We followed Rahul through some very narrow, winding and steep roads to the Socorro Plateau.  He gave each of us an amazing pair of binoculars.  The air was cool and filled with the chirp, call and twitter of different birds.  The first bird we saw was an Asian Koel.  The brilliant yellow of the Golden Hooded Oriole was hard to miss!  We saw Blue Tailed Bee Eaters, Kingfishers, Barbets, gorgeous Racquet Tailed Drongos, Parakeets, Ioras, Prinias, Minivets,  flitting Sunbirds and even a beautiful Leaf bird.  Unfortunately I have no pictures of the birds, they were too far away but beautifully up close to our binocular view.  It felt like we were in the tree with them!  Brandon struggled with the bird watching. His glasses kept getting in the way (poor guy) and he couldn’t focus in right without his eyes hurting or his vision blurring but Adam, Ria and I were enthralled by the colors and the beauty of these sweet feathered creatures.

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At the top of the plateau, we saw a fairly rare spotted eagle and when he flew away, he showed off his huge wing span.  My favorite was the bright flashing Minvet and a teeny tiny Prinia that perched at the top of a dry branch, fluffed out his chest and sang with full gusto for the longest time.  I thought he must bring so much cheer to his creator and it filled my own heart with praise.IMG_0400

IMG_0399Apparently the tall grass on the plateau is often burned so it was dry and the rock was black.  Massive millipedes lay dead.  I photographed some of these but later found curled corpses twice the size.  Yikes!IMG_0406

 

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This ant hill was quite an elaborate castle

IMG_0403We saw what looked like wasp nests in the trees and Rahul told us that they were ant nests.  The ants chew the bark of the trees into a pulp and then engineer this cool looking home.  He said not to attempt disturbing it.  Apparently they have suicide bombers that dive down and find you and punish you rather sorely for messing with them.  We heeded his advise and stayed clear!

Next, Rahul let us watch him do some snake handling.  It was very impressive and I’ll let the photographs speak for themselves.  (Sorry they are not in order.  Ria helped me with adding them to the blog and so I am going to leave it as is.)  The scariest of all was the venomous Russell’s Viper.  We instinctively backed up as many paces as we could without having to step into the bushes behind.  We were pretty shocked to find out that India has the highest snake bite fatalities in the world!

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Skin that the snake shed which was carefully preserved as a souvenir (NOT for Mom!)

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Rahul handling the Whittaker Boa

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Brandon holding the Whitaker Boa

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Spectacled Cobra set free

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Ria touching the Python

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Brandon and Adam touching the python

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Adam holding the Whittaker Boa

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Rahul handling the Python

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A Rat Snake

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The Russel Viper all curled up

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A Rat Snake.  This one was a vibrant Lamborghini yellow

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The Whitaker Boa again

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Feisty Painted Bronzeback Tree snake

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The Russel Viper warming up. Notice that we are as far away as possible!

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Escorting the Cobra to freedom

 

 

 

 

 

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Painted Bronzeback Tree snake up clo

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Just for the record, Rahul  has also published two other books, Free From School – that he wrote when he was sixteen after his parents let him take a year off from school to follow his dream of snake handling.  His other book is Tales of Snakes.  Very engaging and funny – except that I have to take a marker to a few swear words that I rather wish he had *** rather than spelled out! But I would definitely get them again.  His photographs for his and Heinz Laimer’s Birds of Goa are truly beautiful!  These books can be purchased here.

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The snake handling was incredible!

IMG_0504 IMG_0505We so enjoyed our day with Rahul and send out a huge thank you for making our outdoors trip not only very learning but extremely enjoyable!

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Good Habits – Part III – Results

The necessity to prepare for failure and continue being a cheerful reminder has been tough, tough, tough!  Also if anyone finds Cinderella’s Godmother’s wand , will they please not be selfish and grant it for a minute or two?! (It’s probably in Atlantis somewhere, anyway!)

What I’ve had to keep plastered in the forefront of my mind:

The mother who takes pains to endow her children with good habits secures for herself smooth and easy days : while she who lets their habits take care of themselves has a weary life of endless friction with the children.”

I have been shocked to see how difficult it has been to abide by a simple written list!  I wish I could tell you that three weeks has been all it’s taken to nail this down.   Did I say I would be honest? Dang!   Here’s the low down.  Not even one time  has the list been followed 100%.  Not once.  It’s come close, but always one or two things wanting.  Tomorrow morning I am planning on NOT expectantly peeking in to see everything done  but to be ready to appreciate what has BEEN done and smilingly indicate the pending .  I trust I did mention the part about ‘smilingly’ indicating what’s wanting?

On the positive side, the children have started to feel nice about falling asleep in an orderly room and are embarrassed when their rooms are not presentable (which is a lot better than – “looks fine to me.”)  They are amazed to find it actually is possible to find what they need when they want it!

We are a bit sentimental about scattered toys and faded nosegays, and all the tokens of the children’s presence; but the fact is, that the lawless habit of scattering should not be allowed to grow upon children. Everybody condemns the mother of a family whose drawers are chaotic , whose possessions are flung about heedlessly; but at least some of the blame should be carried back to her mother.  It is not as a woman that she had picked up a miserable habit which destroys the comfort, if not the happiness of her home; the habit of disorder was allowed to grow upon her as a child, and her share of the blame is, that she has failed to cure herself.”

I hope that I can truly help my children avoid the above predicament and in the process ease mine.  Only God grant me patience and kindness as we work towards this goal!

*(All italicized words  in this post are quotes from  Charlotte Mason’s  Home Education Series, Part III, Habit Is Ten Natures)

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Good Habits II (Enforcement)

it rests with parents and teachers to lay down lines of habit on which the life of the child may run henceforth with little jolting or miscarriage, and may advance in the right direction with the minimum of effort.  

The morning after our revelation and resolve, Adam and I called the children in and we had a matter of fact talk.  We tried to best explain that they are getting older and instead of becoming more responsible, they seem headed in the opposite direction. Since we love them as deeply as we do, we are determined to help them.  We decided that they would have to follow a list of written instructions from the moment they awoke.  Their toys would have to be reduced.  They could choose upto three items for play (board games excluded). The rest would be put away until they proved faithful with the few.  Yes, tears did ensue but we stood firm.  We did stretch the three items of choice to four!

Making their bed was number one on the list.  (BTW it has actually been proven that people who make their bed everyday are more efficient).   A bed badly made would be considered a bed not made!  What needs to be put away would need to be placed exactly where it belongs and not in the neighboring vicinity! We realize that we will have to mentally prepare for inevitable failure as these habits form and also be diligently to check whether everything required is done and how .

The mother will be tempted to relax her efforts – to overlook a little dawdling because the dear child has been trying so hard.  This is absolutely fatal…To form a habit is the work of a few weeks; to guard it is a work of incessant, but by no means anxious care.

It is possible we are bordering on militant but we are planning to face it with cheer and bring to their attention how pleased they can be with themselves.  How rewarding to look for something and find it exactly where it is expected to be! We are still in the cocoon stage but hopefully the expected metamorphosis will take place and yes, I am referring to Nature’s most magical change and not Kafka’s brilliantly written but rather depressing fiction!

Whether you choose or no to take any trouble about the formation of his habits, it is habit, all the same, which will govern ninety-nine one hundredths of a child’s life…What we can do for them is to secure that they have habits which shall lead them in ways of order, propriety, and virtue, instead of leaving their wheel of life to make ugly ruts in miry places.

*(All italicized words  in this post are quotes from  Charlotte Mason’s  Home Education Series, Part III, Habit Is Ten Natures)

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Good Habits – Part I

Perhaps I am like any other distraught parent.  Surely I must not be the only one whose children are not bad at picking up and being responsible for their stuff?  However were I to give an honest judgement, the verdict would be – “terrible”!  I hear myself constantly shooting out “Put your shoes where they belong”  “Put your laundry in the basket, not on the floor!” “Why hasn’t this book been put back?” “Are your toys left on the floor again?”  It’s exhausting!!

A few options:  a)get mad again, b)put on the threatening tone, c)smile and shrug and do the job for them or ask the more responsible sibling to get it done (kids will be kids, you know), d)patiently instruct for the five hundred and fifth time(knowing the five hundred and sixth time will realistically occur in the next fifteen minutes), e)punish them deservedly, f)pull a few more strands of hair and blink back tears of frustration, g)mourn tearfully to the children about how they do not respect their mother enough to do what needs to be done …Or, or I could take stock and say, “Something is wrong here and by the grace of God, I am going to try to remedy this while I still have a few fleeting moments in hand.”

The question is, what is my goal in parenting?  Of course I want to be a good mother! Feed, clothe and nurture.  Do I wish to be remembered as a “sweet and loving mother” because I gave them whatever they wanted? Because I only had positive things to say whether or not they deserved it – since I didn’t want to be negative? Or do I want to be recalled with a profound sense of gratitude because I helped save them from unnecessary learning in adulthood?  The latter will involve a definite need for muscle.  Emotional muscle.

I have been reading Charlotte Mason’s writings on habit.  Habit is ten natures.  Meaning that just as a natural strength takes the forefront in life, habit is ten such natures.  This could be marvelous or it could be the worst thing possible! A child’s weakness could be just as powerful as his strength.

My children, honestly do not have even a quarter of what the average American child has and yet I see they still do not have a respect for ‘the little’ they own.  The new swimsuit lies where it has been discarded.   The toys are hastily shoved in the wrong boxes and under the bed in a superficial attempt to tidy up.  Their desks are cluttered with papers and junk and their beds are carelessly made. Bad habits that are by no means getting better!

And then I had this brain wave, this moment of enlightenment.  As parents, we want to give our children things, stuff, all that we love for them to have.  Yet, I must remember that how my child takes care of his bike, will determine how he will care for his (and my or his friend’s,) car.  The careless, reckless, inconsiderate, “O well, I’ll get something better and I’ll take better care of it next time” is an attitude that will only impede my child’s development.  NO!  It is not my child’s right to have a gazillion things for the sake of possession (so she can tell her friends, “I have that too.”)  The more I do this, the more I create a covetous child who is not super pleased and content with what she has but wants what someone else has.  There is a legitimate desire to own something for the pleasure of what it renders.  A nice pair of roller skates, a new tennis racquet, a new book; but not to enjoy it for the moment, possess it for the thrill of sheer possession, tiring of it as soon as the novelty wears off.

My in-laws are some of the most generous people I know.  They are both retired but they often send us a love package and it always holds the most for the children.  For the most part, in all fairness, our children are extremely appreciative of all that Grandma and Grandpa send, but occasionally I will see a few items strewn and it pains me, because I know the sacrifice and expense that has gone into purchase, package and post.

Am I spoiling my children?  Down the road are they going to think, “Gee we were loved, we got everything we asked for!” There is also the danger that they might think of Mom as a nag and one who was constantly annoying them.  “Dang, she really got on our nerves, ‘glad we don’t have to put up with that anymore!”  I would hate both equally!  What I am asking myself is can I take a radical path that will help them and in the process preserve my sanity?

I realize that time is short and I must emotionally muscle to the task and rely on the grace of God to stay calm and in control through this process.  I believe I can help my children be responsible, clean, tidy and thankful.  I think this will also help them to be more focused for lessons.  Tidy living equals tidy thoughts.  A scrambled, distracted atmosphere will produce inattention and negligence.  I do not want to ride on the few good times, I want their rails locked down so tight that the ride is always good and the exceptional derailment is quickly rectified.  I shared my moment of enlightment with my husband.  He is always such a wise and steady anchor in my turbulent times!  He decided to support me through this so that we would work together to help our children.

I am not going to worry about the accidentally spilled milk or the print of little hands on the wall, or the set of muddy footprints in the drive way – all these point to the evidence of children in the home but they needn’t be groomed to be sloppy, dawdlers that survive due to the occasional spurt of impromptu bursts of enthusiasm –  a six-hour “I’ll -clean -up -today”  project, that like the comet is a rare occurrence.

In Charlotte’s words, We are all mere creatures of habit. The effort of decision, we have seen, is the greatest effort of life: not the doing of the thing, but the making up of one’s mind as to which thing to do first.

How can I make this easier for my child?

I can lessen the burden.  Minimize the number of items to be dealt with.  This will be my project tomorrow and I shall post Part 2 on how this was done.  Part 3 will be the honest results – success or (God forbid) failure, as shall follow.

Pray for me!

 

 

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Backyard Surprise!

IMG_9778Last month a pair of cats were caught in the act (as it were), and lo and behold, the female cat gave birth to her litter in our small cemented water meter box!

IMG_9765What was really cool was that the cat was just in the process of giving birth!  So the children got to see her birth four teeny, tiny kittens.  Brandon said they looked like little pieces of meat but in no time at all she had them licked clean!

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Of course, this Mama’s heart went out to her.  She looked so hungry and she could not move since all four were actively latched on!  We put some milk in a saucer and put it as close as we could without letting her feel threatened.  Once she knew we were not going to hurt the kittens, she became very comfortable with us and (I think) was grateful for the sardines and milk we provided.

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IMG_9781IMG_9776It was perfect backyard nature study material!  The children sat and drew what they could and to their great surprise found that even a little frog had taken shelter in among them!

 

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Settling into our new home in Goa

IMG_9529Goa is beautiful! IMG_9261We love it here!

It has taken me so long to get back into the blogosphere because there has been  so much transition.   Agarwal Packers and Movers (reputed to be one of the best moving companies in India – don’t believe that!) lost our stuff, damaged quite a bit, seriously delayed the shipment and gave us much grief.  No compensation.  No apology.  But that’s that!

The house we moved into is absolutely perfect for us but was in need of much repair, in fact we are still working on it and there is plenty more to do!  But we love it!  Then my Macbook’s motherboard got fried due to a voltage surge.  Apparently this is a common problem in Goa.  ‘Wish I’d known that earlier!  Anyway, the good news is that it’s back and I’m back!

IMG_9264IMG_9200This is the very first time our family has lived in a house in India.  It’s usually been an apartment.  It is just wonderful to have a yard!  Small but our own.  The children are so happy!  They have seen so much more nature since we’ve moved here.

IMG_9190IMG_9574Behind our backyard is a compound that is all jungle.  It’s an old, run down, barely visible Portuguese style villa and must have been beautiful in its day.  Now it is in ruins and the compound looks like a jungle.  There are two Chikoo trees.  I have never known them to grow as tall as these and their fruit is sugary sweet.  Birds of all sorts can be seen here; Mynas,  noisy Jungle Babblers, elusive Barbets, decked out Kingfishers, Shy Rufus Treepies, darting sunbirds and cooing doves (to name a few).IMG_9455

It is so very lovely to look out my kitchen window and see greenery and bright hibiscus blooms.  The call and twitter of the birds is a welcome change from the noise of rumbling, honking trucks and cars.

IMG_9180IMG_9405 Brandon is in reptilian paradise!  He loves catching frogs, toads, lizards and geckos and let me tell you, there are plenty around!  IMG_9468

 

Another big happiness for the children was our wonderful neighbor’s dogs.  Adam and the children are crazy about dogs!  When looking for Brandon, it is not unusual for me to find him keeping Dexo and Brownie company!  IMG_9402

IMG_9181We’ve had some amazing backyard discoveries  But more about that later!

 

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Adieu Delhi and Lodhi!

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Lodhi Gardens was a remarkable blessing during our stay in New Delhi!  A haven for Nature Study and an escape from the daily grind!IMG_9905

My other homeschooling mom- friends and  their children managed to squeeze in a last trip to this refuge before we moved to Goa.

 

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So many memories and so many firsts for many of our children – including the first tree climbed and the first dog bite, all in Lodhi!  Steeped in history and centuries old, an oasis of calm and blessed greenery in the midst of Delhi’s metropolis, we acknowledge its contribution to our lives!

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Lodhi Gardens was a balm to our senses, so much to see – well, then again, for the most of us, at least!

 

IMG_0035Much gratitude goes to my homeschool support group!  My friends and my children’s friends! Some made it and some could not, but I want to acknowledge them all!   Thank you for making our journey easier! Company makes all the difference!   Special thanks to Sharon, our old friend and Tabita – who joined us for the day!

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Thanks also to Lii, my dear friend who took most of these beautiful pictures and gave me many a ride to Lodhi!

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Yes! We completed a school year!

Should I break into dance?  This is what this homeschool mom feels like doing besides shamelessly brandishing her self earned medal for a successful year.  Either that, or break down in disbelief!  Really?  I did it? Is it possible?  Is it done? YES!

At first I was meticulously following Ambleside Online’s Year 2 and Year 5, respectively and losing a lot of hair in the process!  Catherine Levison’s books helped me immensely!  And she seemed to give me the courage to be brave enough to step out of the bonds of the syllabus and to be practical to combine subjects at different levels.  To be honest, Ambleside encourages flexibility but the driven side in me makes me want to take it all on…but I’m learning to be true to Charlotte Mason’s philosophy – the gentle art of learning versus the frantic code of cramming!

Here’s what we covered this year:

Weekly Nature Study.  Many thanks to Barb and Debi for extra inspiration here!

Scripture Memorization – we memorized Psalm 46.  We did something a little different with it – but that’s for another post!

Math (I continued with MathUSee).  Steve Demme’s advise to refrain from hurrying through lessons but master each step in progression has preserved my math comparison sense from scrambling into a terrifying need for psychiatric intervention.  Slow and steady.

For Penmanship/ Copy work, I used Sonya Schaffer’s Spelling Wisdom and completed Marie Rippel’s All about Spelling level 1 and 2. (If anyone is interested in purchasing either one or both levels from me, let me know).

We introduced formal grammar studies this year with Ed Vavra’s KISS Grammar and so far that is working well for us.

For Phonics/ Reading,  Brandon read aloud My Father’s Dragon by Ruth Stiles Gannet and Harriet Treadwell’s First and Second Reader and has started on the third.  He also read aloud parts of Backyard Animals.  He definitely can read but is not so terribly excited about it.  I am just trying to be consistent in having him read aloud in small enough measures to not frustrate him but still increase his proficiency.

For Music Appreciation we followed  Wheeler and Deucher’s, Sebastian Bach, The Boy from Thuringia and Mozart the Wonder Boy.  It comes with a lovely CD to listen to  and also coloring pages that go with each chapter’s reading.

For Art Study we read about Monet, Georgia O Keefe and Michaelangeo.  I had a frame

Their take on Georgia O Keefe's Art

Their take on Georgia O Keefe’s Art

IMG_9170made so that I could put in a different print every week to look at from a Monet Taschen Portfolio that I had found on sale at Barnes and Noble.  I also found the awesome Georgia O Keefe, by Nancy Frazier at a thrift shop in Baltimore.   Beautiful photographs!

The discovery of a used The Great Artists’ Book on Michaelangelo at The Calcutta Samaritans charity jumble sale was a great find!  It was an in-depth look at his masterpiece – the Sistine chapel vault and also the altar wall fresco. Brandon was particularly fascinated by this.   There is so much detail AND nudity!  At first I was a little apprehensive and then decided to be matter of fact and not draw attention to it.  He finally asked, “Er, Mom, why are most of these people naked?”

“Well, Brandon, the human body is incredibly beautiful.  But it just doesn’t work for humans to go around naked.   This way the artists can show us how beautiful human bodies are without shame.  We can appreciate it that way too and not have to get all weird and embarrassed.  Also it’s amazing how the artist can draw the pull and turn of the muscles in different positions.”

“That is pretty cool,” he agreed, “that makes sense.”

Whew! Goes to show that as parents we have a great part to play in setting a child’s perspective in the right direction

As far as Physical Education, they enrolled in Tennis classes and joined the Sports Complex Pool ( Ok, this they really loved!)

Science – Adam did Jeanie Fulbright’s Astronomy with both of them.  They each had their respective notebooks – Elementary and Junior.  He did a great job doing this class with them.  I think the children enjoyed having a different teacher for a change.   This teacher enjoyed the change as well and that teacher had greater appreciation for this teacher when astronomy class was done!

Year 2

Instead of Island Story,(H.E Marshall),  I took on Indian History one day a week.

We started the Little Duke and for some reason could not get into it.  So I stopped and we actually mostly incorporated Ria’s literature list for year 5.  Brandon seemed to follow along just fine.

We enjoyed Seabird and Pagoo (Holling) and I followed CM’s Elementary Geography.

We read d’Aulaire’s Abraham Lincoln which nicely coincided with Genevieve Foster’s Abraham Lincoln’s World.

We had already read Heidi  and Jungle Book last summer.

Year 5

For our one story from Plutarch’s Lives, we chose Marcus Brutus.  I simply have to make mention of Anne White’s incredible  study notes that saved this Mama’s time and sanity!  She has done an awesome job!

Shakespeare’s Unabridged Twelfth Night – which was a huge hit!  We read in segments and followed along with the BBC Youtube movie.  (watch it through before showing it to your children – it requires a little discretion.)  I found Ria the other day with her nose buried in the pages of Twelfth Night and laughing to herself!

Ria continued to read Country of Ours on her own and then she would narrate to me – either in written form or orally.  She is four chapters shy of completing the book.

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Abraham Lincoln’s World– Genevieve Foster ( I highly recommend her books).  I love the big world view and the different events within a set period of time.  Geography, History and character study all at the same time.

Of Courage Undaunted: Across the continent with Lewis and Clark by James Daughterty.  This is an awesome book!

IMG_9171 IMG_9167A photobiography of Alexander Bell and an overview of Louis Pasteur.

Poetry was a conglomeration of Longfellow, Kipling and Best Remembered Poems by Martin Gardner.

We continued with Thomas Bullfinch’s Age of Fable.  I could have definitely made use of this book in college!IMG_9172

King Arthur and His Knights by Howard Pyle.

IMG_9168Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist – which we loved!  How on the mark is Charlotte Mason when she says that children are perfectly capable of understanding the unabridged classics read to them without painful wordy interruptions and lengthy explanations.  Let them have their own perception of the author’s words and not the Mama Reader’s opinions (my very abridged version)!

Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery.

We started Isaac Newton and Physics for Kids by Kerrie Logan Hollihan and are taking that with us into the next year as well.

My mother in law sent us the classic The Princess Bride DVD.  Our rule is we cannot watch the movie until we read the book.  It is fantastic!  Honestly, way better than the movie.  The only draw back is the lines are terribly infectious!

Ria is an avid reader.  She is a huge Roald Dahl fan.  She also loves the Narnian series by C.S. Lewis, The Little House on the Prairie series and also likes Enid Blyton and Ruskin Bond as well, to name a few.

We are on a decided school break since we move to Goa next week.  Once we are settled in a bit, I hope to start the new school year.  In the meantime we will continue with our cheat start on Tolkein’s,  The Hobbit and keep steadily proceeding with Math and of course, Nature Study.

My next post will probably be from Goa.   Thanks for paying any attention at all to my blog!  See you next post!

 

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