Wednesday, January 30, 2013

First Stripe

This weekend Pearl finally received her first stripe. This little white belt has been looking forward to the recognition of her Tang Soo Do training for a while. Her diary entry (which I am always permitted to read) described the scene and proudly recorded that all four of her grandparents were able to come celebrate her accomplishment.


Here is the big moment when her daddy wound the tape around her belt to make the stripe. She tells me it was her favorite part of the event, but she doesn't want to share the special encouraging words he murmured.


The stripe! We are so fortunate to have such wonderful families involved in Jasper's karate school.  They are excited about the ministry and make for great role models for little marital artists.

In her enthusiasm, Sapphire could not simply stick to throwing little punches and a kick in the back row ("ssss ssss hut," she always says while she does it). She had to run up front alongside her sister during the big moment. I think she was expecting a piece of tape too, or maybe just some applause. 


Here is our little domestic angel ladling off the cream from our raw milk, lovingly provided by Spot (the cow's real name) and her family.  Sometimes Pearl shakes the cream into butter, which she guards for her own muffins.

I remember watching my grandma manage milk in a jar like this one back when she carried milk out of her milk house each day.


They can be pretty loving in spurts! Sapphire certainly likes the idea of being a big sister. I should celebrate that I am able to sit on our loveseat and read to all three girls at once cuddled around me, a scene I always hoped would pan out when we were in the paperwork phase. Ruby's defense of her lap territory meant we didn't find our reading peace for some time after we got back from China. but we are there.  Of course sometimes a little girl gets kicked off the island because poking a sister is more fun than listening to the story. 

Ruby calls her Waa-wawa, and those of you who know Sapphire's real name can maybe figure that out.  We are very entertained by Ruby's developing language skills. At the table she can hold entire conversations in pantomime of absolute gravity. Food is a serious subject. Then she'll surprise us with whole sentences mashed together, such as Iwantmine (over and over), Iwantabite, and Idon'tknow. 



And, because I can't resist recording Sapphire's 'smiling' face, here it is again.


Friday, January 25, 2013

Pet Shop in the Deep Freeze

This week the girls have been playing puppy pet shop like crazy. Hours of moving little puppy dogs from sofa to bench to pillow. These little guys have the life. Fortunately they don't even have to go outside into the bitter cold.

We're not sure how Sapphire developed her crooked "I'm not going to smile just because you want me to, but I'll do this" mouth. 

Here she's cuddling her kitty that sometimes is said to scratch.
We stumbled upon an amazing and unexpected motivation for Pearl's school work.  If she stays up until 10pm for additional adult attention and cuddle time, she tackles her school work with gusto the next morning.  I assumed staying up late would make her grumpier, but it does not seem to, and she's been even more pleasant when I give her tasks. 

Our studies have included Jamestown & William Penn this week. I found some interactive coin games that she asks to do, perhaps not realizing they are school-related.

I feel like our week has been slowed down by physical ailments a little. Ruby has had an unfortunate cough for a week. She can make us all freeze when it gets to the "I might gag" stage.  I, meanwhile, pulled an arch tendon in my foot and have been tromping around like a troll. 


If anyone is interested in these puppies, I'm told they will be ready for pick up in a few weeks.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Bowling Buddies

This week we spent part of our family day at the bowling alley.  All three girls loved bowling, though the little ones sometimes forgot to watch to see if they knocked down any pins.

Amid the sounds of the pins falling over we talked about cheering for each other, and what we can say when someone doesn't do as well as they had hoped. 

The place was lively because the high schoolers had walked over for their gym class.

During our studies we *finally* finished our pilgrim book.  It had moved on to cover King Phillip's War, so we watched youtube documentaries about that and talked about why the Wampanaog people would have felt betrayed by the pilgrim's descendents. 

Now we'll move into discussing Jamestown. I read some pretty horrible things about John Smith, so Pearl is already aware that the romantic story about Pocahonta is hogwash.

We're just about done the Kaya American Girl books.
We watched the Disney Hercules and talked about the differences between that version and the Greek myth.

We used this week to review many ideas: reviewing addition/subtraction facts, coins, Books of the Bible, and simple fractions.


Sapphire had a very high fever over the weekend, so she sucked up the tylenol and tv time.  It peaked at 104 degrees, but came down by Monday morning, thankfully.  

If you are enjoying Downton Abbey and haven't read the story that quotes someone dear to our hearts, you can view that here.  


Thursday, January 10, 2013

Port Discovery & Lessons

School has started fairly smoothly, though Pearl expressed a preference for playing all day instead, like we did over Christmas.  On Tuesday this week we tried to combine school with some serious play by going to Port Discovery in Baltimore. 

It has a huge, three story jungle gym in the center, and the three floors have a variety of themed play rooms: diner (with child-level counters & stoves), a toddler play land, an art studio, an Egyptian dig site, and a Greek culture & myth display, which we had prepared for by rereading many myths. Pandora and Aphrodite are her favorites.



We hadn't thought about it ahead of time, but Port Discovery led to sensory overload for Ruby. Just after we got there, about three buses of school kids arrived, and the noise shot up.  Ruby enjoyed copying her sisters in the grocery store play area, but she slowly got stiller and stiller, and grabbed her washy tight. We headed out into the sunlight for a lunch break, and when we returned from touring the harbor the schoolkids left and she acclimated to the environment just fine. 



We had been keeping Ruby out of the 5-10 year old super jungle gym, but we relented, and it turns out she did just fine. The first time she came down the two story slide, she was giddy with joy. 

They tell me that slide and the bagels for lunch were their favorite.  Sapphire was able to compare it to the Hands on House in Lancaster, and said she preferred that smaller one.


We fit in a unit on Greek myths and culture before that trip. Otherwise, we are studying colonial living (Diane promises to have us over to learn how to feather or [de-feather?] a chicken). We are reading the Kaya American Girl books, which the older two both enjoy.

Our musical study has, perhaps, gone in a dangerous direction. I put in the Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat soundtrack. Now Pearl won't stop singing the four lines she knows. I had to decide if I wanted to hear at least a whole song or just those four lines over...and over....and then Sapphire picked up about three of the lines, so it was decided. We watched the movie. Now they can sing bits of many of the songs. Maybe it is better this way.

Here's Pearl and her friend. They were *so* excited about the matching outfits.

For math Pearl is reviewing + and - facts, which are now called fact triangles. She likes to practice addition into the thousands as long as we stay away from subtraction.  I guess we'll get there eventually.  I found we also have to review fractions and other basics. There are so many things we have to review each day!




Finally, before I took down the Christmas decorations, I snapped a photo of our Jesse Tree. This was the first year we tried one, and it developed out of research I had done for the Christmas book.  We made our own decorations, hanging one on our tree each lunch or dinner.  Sapphire's favorite part was singing "O Come O Come Emmanuel", which we did each time. Ruby always insisted on holding the sheet music for it. Toddlers love rituals. 


A shoot will come up from the stump of Jesse;
    from his roots a Branch will bear fruit.
 The Spirit of the Lord will rest on him—
    the Spirit of wisdom and of understanding,
    the Spirit of counsel and of might,
    the Spirit of the knowledge and fear of the Lord
 and he will delight in the fear of the Lord. --Isaiah 11:1-3



"red and yellow and green and brown and scarlet and black and ochre and peach and ruby and olive and violet and fawn..."





Tuesday, January 01, 2013

Christmas and New Year


Christmas 2012 has come and gone, but we have reason to think fondly on our time as a family this year.  At the Christmas Eve service all three girls held their own lit candles at the end while we sang "Silent Night," with plenty of adult supervision.  The next day Sapphire woke up totally oblivious to the delights of the day, and Pearl had to work to convince her it really was Christmas. 

We enjoyed our homemade scone breakfast (a family tradition) and liberated a few presents. Later we met family at my sister's house for a very nice afternoon and evening. We were able to see the rest of the family this last Saturday, although Jasper's dad had to miss out since he is sadly in the hospital.

I went out with my brother-in-law on Christmas day, scouring the countryside to find a yard-full of Amish buggies for the book.  We did find some!


Ruby figured out the present thing right away, and she ate so much on Christmas Day! She was pretty scared of the dogs my siblings had at the celebration, but hopefully in time she will learn to love these "cousins."

Sapphire received a swim suit, and she wore it most of the evening.

The two big girls got a treat--they stayed over in "their" room at their uncle's house. Jasper and I went into the city with Ruby for a nice Indian dinner. It sort of felt like we were back in China--fancy restaurant, just the three of us, Ruby stuffing her face with rice.

Then, this week, Pearl had a friend sleep over, which is a fun treat. The girls did very well. A yard full of snow helped.  And last night was New Year's Eve, so we had friends over, and Pearl's best buddy came too. The little girls went to bed, but Pearl kept running into the kitchen and pointing excitedly to the clock--thrilled that she was seeing 10pm and 11pm with no threats of bedtime. We had a nice time with our friends too!

We're not quite done opening presents. The girls don't seem to feel any pressure to finish, and we like to take our time. 

This morning Pearl and I resumed school after a two week break. I think we'll ease back into it. We watched several youtube videos on how to cure animal hides as part of our Pilgrim lesson.  She didn't flinch when we saw a deer brain blended up for the process. 



Worn out by the frozen fun