Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Back to Serious Work After Feast of Tabernacles

Since the feast of trumpets, when I updated last, Will has had at least nine days of journal writing and reading, math, spelling, and language arts lessons.  That's all I have recorded.  We've been quite busy, though.  We left Sept. 20 to head to Idaho for our feast of tabernacles trip.  We got back on Oct. 1.  Will took two chapter books, both 70-something pages long, with him.  He completed one during the trip there, and he read the other one in full on the way back.  It worked out the way I had hoped it would.

We had a nice trip.  Oddly enough, I got out of habit of reading to Will his daily proverb while we were there.  I did not take any bible story book along, but I did take the holy day salvational plan map that I always use for holy days, pictured here:


Usually I go over the map with them both on the first day of the feast of tabernacles (a holy day) and then right after Tabernacles, on the 8th day (another holy day).  We did not do this at all on the 8th day this year, and I was rather in a meditative mode nearly all that day, thinking about the number 8 and eternity and time.

Two of the non-holy days were spent driving through Yellowstone National Park.  That was a great way to spend a couple of days during our great God's thanksgiving feast.  The views are absolutely breathtaking, or as Nathan said, "Everything is a picture."  I took many pictures, but I've yet to sort them onto our Shutterfly share site.  For those waiting on that, please bear patiently with me.  I've felt overwhelmed.  We actually all got colds while on the trip, and though I suffered badly only one day with cold symptoms, including a bad sore throat that took my voice away, it turned into bronchitis, and I stayed sick for a long time.  My ribs were all sore from coughing, and I had pain in my chest and back.  I was in such bad pain that I resorted to an OTC painkiller and NSAID--ibuprofen--for a couple of days, and I have been considered to have a fairly high pain tolerance (though I don't personally think so, anymore).  That's the first time I've used a painkiller of the like in 8.5 years.  It helped enough, though, for me to bear through it.  It surely wasn't as bad as the distress my body was in.  I'm still sore, but I'm recovering quite nicely.  Add to this that the boys went to stay with my sister and my parents for a few days, which gave me a needed break, but then I made a trip down to get them.  I also have had to make corrections to my book proof that is now in the publishing process.  I also wanted to add an introduction.  I've just been busy, busy, busy with so much.

We got to see a black bear and three moose.  These were great to see!  We saw a lot of elk, bison, and other animals, too.  The hot springs, geysers, fumaroles, mud pots, mountains, rivers, streams, and other landscape features we saw were fantastic!  Here are a few of the pictures we saw on our trip:








Interestingly enough, the day after my last blog entry was a weekly sabbath, and we went for a sabbath drive.  Nathan stopped down a dirt road and commented on an animal track in the mud.  I hopped out and ran around.  I just knew it was a black bear track, and I was able to take two pictures, one with one of my shoes and a nickel for comparison, but a car was coming, and so after that I had to rush to get back in the truck.  After we got home, I confirmed the track with our track identification guide.  This is just a few miles from here:





Will has found bird nests, neat rocks, and the like in the past month.  He also found a tree across the road that he loves to climb high up into.

I am not sure how much I like the Cul-de-Sac Kid books he has been reading.  I bought them from a Christian bookstore, but the name "Christian" doesn't always mean it's modeled after the true Christ.  The first one he read was about a mystery of something.  I can't remember what now, but it revolved around the christmas holiday.  I think the mystery was a lit-up evergreen tree in a new neighbor's living room.  Then another book was something about "green gravy," and it apparently revolved around St. Patrick's Day.  When I scanned over the books, I noticed one was about another day of a so-called "saint"--St. Valentine's Day.  Will took a book with him to my parents', and when I was there, I picked up the book to see how much he'd read.  He said, "Oh, Momma, in case you're wondering which holiday that one talks about, it's Flag Day."  LOL!  It was so funny.

I bought him some historical fiction "graphic novels."  Well, it turns out that they are laid out inside like comic books, but they are fictional stories BASED ON true historical figures.  The one he is currently reading is about Anne Frank.  He said he really likes it.  GOOD!  I do wonder whether they are a tad advanced for him, but he hasn't seemed to have any trouble.

I recently started having him do journal entries.  I then have a notebook of my own that I write what he wrote with corrections, and then he takes it and writes on the next page of his journal the correct way.  This way he gets more practice learning how to spell properly, punctuate, indent, etc.  Plus, it gets him thinking about things to write about.  I also have him draw a picture at the top.  The journal notebooks I have bought him have a space to draw something at the top.  I really like them.

Here is a sample of one of his initial journal entries and then the corrected one:



 It's about a dog for which we are now caring, until we find it a home.  He drew a picture of himself and then our front screen door with a dog outside it.  He can definitely read words a lot better than he can spell them, but that's why he's doing journal writing.  ;-)

Well, now that it's cooling off and we have no trips to take, we'll be getting more serious about learning and book work again.

Until next time...