Monday, May 14, 2012

Currencies, Plants, Swans and Friendship

In addition to his interest in precious metals and in metals in general, Jaden has been interested in finding older coins that have silver in them and looking for flaws, knowing if he found any that some silly person out there would actually buy them for hefty prices.  He also sent some U.S. currency to his friend Young (in Kenya), along with some seashells and coral that he'd collected from our trip to the VIs, and he got back some currency from Young last week.  We used a currency converter so that he could understand how their currency compares to ours.  The fifty Kenyan shillings note pictured below currently equals about 59 or 60 US cents.

Ten Kenyan shillings coin, five shillings coin, fifty shillings note, and Kenyan postage stamps (coffee and ground nuts, as they call what we call peanuts)

One of the things we read about in a recent issue of Ranger Rick magazine was whooper swans.  The pictures of the cygnets (baby swans) reminded me immediately of the story of The Ugly Duckling, the story of which is included in one of My Fun With Reading books that I’ve had since I was a little girl.  I remember reading it to Jaden William at least once several years ago but have not read it to the other children.  So after reading about the swans, I read that story to them, too, which ended in a good moral lesson.

L: Cynets in Ranger Rick; R: The cygnet in The Ugly Duckling

It was heartbreaking to read about how the the "ugly duckling" was treated by his supposed mother, siblings, and others on the pond.  So the "duckling" swam away on his own.  He saw some swans one day:


After this he was lonely for many months, getting lost in the woods, being found by a farmer, staying in a shed with corn, and then leaving in the spring and finally coming upon a pond again:



He realized, when he saw his reflection, that he had become a beautiful swan, and he thought back to how the little ducklings had said he was so ugly.  He was not only accepted by the fellow swans in the pond, but he was thought to be the prettiest one of all:


In the end, the "Ugly Duckling" didn't even care how beautiful he appeared on the outside, but he was happy that he had friend who liked him for who he was.  The End. 

When I went out to pull grass and weeds out of the garden, I took updated pictures of some of our plants.  The cucumbers have grown, and everything else has come up.  I didn’t take any pictures of the bibb lettuce, though.  I think I may have accidentally pulled some before I realized what I was doing.  The rain had also washed out many of our squash plants, but some of them germinated elsewhere.  I think we lost half our corn or more.  Anyway, things seem to be fine so far among all the Ozark rocks.

Cucumbers in the upper left (before the surrounding grass was pulled); squash in upper right, pumpkin in lower left; tomato in center; corn in lower right

Jade found some sort of insect larva or a parasite (hoping not the latter) underneath a board that was left lying in the backyard.  It was amongst the many pill bugs (aka roly-polies).  We’re not sure what it is...yet, anyway.

What is this?? 


There are some things I can now say I know what are.  I identified a few more plants (all  lovely wildflowers) last week, some of which I’ve been unsuccessful for years to identify.  I’ll post the info I collect on each of them this week, on next week’s post.  This will be the fourth year since I started our plant binder to identify and collect information on local plants, but the last two years I have not been very serious about it.  We’ve not spent enough time or interest on it, sadly.  This year my interest has been significantly renewed.  I was greatly inspired in many ways recently by reading The Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins.  In addition to renewing a more serious interest in our plant project, it’s also renewed an interest in traditional archery, so much so that I am going to sell a gun I have to buy a long bow and some arrows.  Nathan has already been looking at bows for me.  My interest has also seemed to spark renewed interest by both him and Jaden, too.  I’m so excited!  I’m really looking forward to shooting again.  I believe it’s not only a great skill to have, but I think it will be a great outlet to release stress. 

Wildflowers are pictured below.  Stay tuned to learn more about them next week.

Left still unididentified; upper right is Fire pink (Silene virginica); not for certain yet on lower right

Left is yellow pimpernel (Taenidia integerrima)-; upper right is black medic (Medicago lupulina), lower right is Venus' looking glass (Triodanis perfoliata)

Jade took these of me with Liv and Liz

Liv with Ohio spiderwort (Tradescantia ohiensis)

L: Some bloomed spiderwort; UR: Venus' looking glass; LR: Rough-fruited cinquefoil (Potentilla recta)

Spit and spittle bug in wild grasses (which I hope to finally properly identify this year; looks edible)

Ox-eye daisy (Leucanthemum vulgar); ox-eye daisies; daisy fleabane (Erigeron strigosus)

All these I knew prior:  blackberry (Rubus fruticosus), Deptford pink (Dianthus armeria), and black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia triloba)

Butterflies and dragonfly

Until next time...

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Unleavened Bread, Gardening, Nature, and More

Well, I got behind again, because our computer was in the repair store for over two weeks!  This post will have a lot of pictures.  It's hard to narrow them down, and even so there are still quite a few.

We observed Passover and the Feast Week of Unleavened Bread.  That's been a month ago now.  The kids usually like the different foods we eat during that week, because we do not eat yeasted/fermented foods (with the exception of wine).  I go a step further and do not use baking powder in my foods, as we eat more quick breads than yeasted ones, anyway, so leaving the baking powder out of the quick breads (like muffins) reminds us of the theme of the week, which is that we're meditating on our sin weaknesses and working to rid them out of our lives (leaven representing sin).  I took a few pictures of some of the foods we ate:

Baking powder-free muffins, tortilla sandwich, tortilla pizza

We had to catch up on reading our periodicals.  We didn't really read anything from January through March, which is strange for us, but so much else was going on.  By the middle of March we had 22 magazines and other periodicals to read (pictured below), but we are now caught up:

Ranger Rick; Your Big Backyard; Weeky Reader; WR News; WR Science Spin; Arbor Day

We learned so much, which we always do, but we crammed a lot into a short space of time. Here is how the kids looked one day while waiting for me to sit down with them for our reading time (with Liz on the floor getting her tummy time):



Yeah, the "twins" Trust and Liv are real characters



We also planted a garden.  I only took pictures of the cucumber plants I transplanted.  I need to take new pictures of everything that is growing now.  This is experimental.  Nathan used his tractor and dumped a lot of loose soil into a bed, but it's our soil, so though it's loose, it's full of rocks.  We're curious to see how well it does.

Young cucumber plants













Some pictures during one of our walks:

Some sort of growths on the leaves, not yet determined

Wildflowers!


Scenery on our walk, including neighbor's horses

Eastern tent caterpillars


Nathan and Jade found an interesting flower during a walk they took in the woods:

Not yet identified...does anyone know what it is?

Jaden completed a mosaics class.  I love his art.  He was trying to make a butterfly in part of one of his creations, though, and I guess he miscalculated the number of pieces he had.  I still wonder whether he couldn't have rearranged some pieces.  I love that he chose some red tile in the mix, though!  I love that color! The larger mosaic has a chalkboard included, and he added the green paint to the wooden edges after he got home with it.


Jaden also reorganized his tool bag.  It was a disastrous mess!

Happy boy and his tool bag

The old A/C's that Nathan replaces are stored back on our property again (after a few years of Casey doing it, before he moved), and Jaden scrapped all the ones so far, all by himself.  Nathan paid him $100. Though it's a small fraction of what the metal will bring, that's good money for a boy his age.  He is doing quite well on his goal to save up $1000 (and then do I'm-not-sure-what).

Jade with A/Cs and scrap metal

Jade with coils

Copper


Jade also recently planted some wheat:

Wheat grass

He started it in the pot, and I guess it may stay there until it seeds, if it will do so in the pot.  It's much taller now.  Grass grows so quickly!

Jade found a stone that looks like a grounding stone, about two years ago, but he recently found another rock with which he decided to do some grinding.  He actually did this during the week of Unleavened Bread.  No, he didn't grind enough flour to make any bread.  But it was a learning experience.  He learned how difficult it would have been for people in more ancient times.

Jade's grinding stones with some wheat berries

It was after that when he decided to plant some of the wheat seeds.  I guess it's the first time any of us have actually tried.  Like Nathan said, it's good to know our grain stores are truly made of viable seed.  Not only does that mean we're eating the best, but if we needed to plant some, we could. I grind all my grains with my Wolfgang electric grain mill, but I also have a manual mill.  Trust and Liv get out the latter quite often, but they don't really know anything about it.  I've decided I'll put some grain in it and let them mill it into flour.  Jade did so at that age.  It's a good time to bring out The Little Red Hen book again, one of our favorites.  I think they will all enjoy seeing the wheat grass come to fruition.  Moving on...

We got to enjoy a cool wolf spider and her babies on the front porch:

Check out the eyes on this wolf spider

Can you see the baby spider who fell off its mother's back?

Earthworms are always exciting.  He found one that was especially swollen-looking, so we reviewed how an earthworm reproduces, the function of the clitellum, etc.


Here are a couple pics of Jade, one showing his taking apart contactors (from A/Cs), and another of him enjoying his chow mein (yum!) after we read about early Chinese civilation:

A snail:




My daddy bought the kids some new books:

Usborne has some good books


My momma gave me some wildflower seeds to plant:

A nice variety of wildflower seeds!

Jade took off with my camera to photograph some sort of caterpillar. I just remembered we didn't try to identify it.



Trusten and I started making a potholder.  My mother bought the kit for Trusten.

He's deeply concentrating

His progress

After we started the cross-weaving, it wasn't long before he wanted to quit for the day.  I had to help him do that part, whereas the first part was pretty easy for him.  We're finished with the cross-weaving now, but I'm not understanding how to finish it.  The picture isn't helpful, and when it comes to putting threads, yarns, or other such things together to make a finished product, I'm pretty useless!  I'll get it figured out, and we'll finish it once I do.  I think I need to ask Nathan, because he's actually better at doing stuff like that than I am.  Yeah, I know, this is one of those easy-to-do kits, but I'm still pretty clueless!

As far as other things go:

Jaden is going along fine in his Grade 4 grammar book, he's doing well on his spelling, he's always reading something (one of the latest things he's reading is a big illustrated Q&A book on USA history, and he took off with my book about the Titanic, but I'm not sure he's reading it.  It could be boring to him; I thought it was interesting, but I was 15 or 16 when I bought it), and he just finished practicing the cursive alphabet.  He's still doing Grade 3 math and going slowly through that.

Trusten has started the Rocket Readers Learn-to-Read Bible that I used for Jaden.  I'm teaching him to read, starting with that.  He understands phonics pretty well and can recognize many sight words.  He's working on writing.

That's it for now.  Until next time...