Showing posts with label port discovery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label port discovery. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 06, 2013

Hands on House

Our family can now evaluate the difference between the two children's museums in our area.  Sapphire has stated she prefers the Hands on House in Lancaster.  While Port Discovery of Baltimore is about 12 times the size of the little Lancaster place, the Hands on House allowed the girls all-day face painting, and they made use of it. 

Both places kept them busy. The 2 story jungle gym in Baltimore made them giggle just to look at it, but the Hands on House was cleaner and quieter--less class trip, more family day out. 

Their little stations offer a chance to build styrofoam snow forts (to pummel with soft bean bag snow balls), pick and sell corn, and run an assembly line, among other things.  The girls really enjoyed exploring this all together. 

The face painting was the highlight, though, and they kept going back for more.  Ruby was not a fan of paint on her own face, but she eventually saw the beauty of having a father who would sit patiently while little girls stabbed near his eyes with paintbrushes.


There is Sapphire's special smile again.  The place was only open from 11-4pm, and though we took an hour break for lunch, we used up just about as much of the time there as we could.  It kept them busy.  The older two especially seemed to enjoy the toy assembly line of wiffle balls and blocks at the end.  Their daddy and I wished there was a nap room--watching them have so much fun wore us out.

Side note: I've been prepping for my trip to northern Europe in June. I *love* planning things out, and the friend I'm traveling with is very busy, so I get to mull over all sorts of details. A planner's delight. Soon I'll turn my attentions to the revisions to the Christmas book the editor suggested or VBS (coming this August!), but for now I love wandering the streets of Copenhagen and Oslo in my mind (alongside Rick Steves, my tour guide of choice for this trip). 
Next week marks Ruby's sixth month anniversary with us. We all talked about Family Day during lunch (that's the 1 year anniversary of being all together). This is my preferred term for Gotcha Day. Gotcha is not a word!  The girls thought Family Day would be all about Ruby, but I want us to see it as a celebration of our complete family, not just one person.  We'll have to talk about this more as a family.

I sent a 6 month update to Ruby's foster home and got an immediate, encouraging reply. It is so nice to have that contact! 


This was Sapphire's third and final face painting of the day. They really developed, didn't they?

She didn't want to wash it off. 

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..."