Wednesday, September 11, 2024
A couple of things
Monday, September 09, 2024
Paper arrow-planes and Fanuel-on-the-Wall
Saturday, September 07, 2024
Funny Phoebe (and other stories)
Because clearing spiderwebs off the house is the same thing as regret, right?
Friday, September 06, 2024
Thoughts (and prayers)
Wednesday, September 04, 2024
Wednesday things
Monday, September 02, 2024
Allatoona Falls
I do need to write the introduction to a paper this evening, but Blogger uploaded my pictures in the exact order I wanted them (instead of the exact opposite order, which is what usually happens) and so to reward the system for doing a good job, I will write a little bit about today.
Evidently we didn't communicate things very well and so weekend plans got a bit complicated. I think Grandpa texted us rather early in the week about weekend plans. Tuesday, if I believe, which is one of our busier days around here. I was already nagging around about it on Wednesday morning. And at some point he wrote to his dad and made a plan.
The plan was that...because Andrew had taken so long to write back to his dad...and then his dad had taken so long to write back to Andrew...that Rachel was busy babysitting on Friday night and then on Saturday night the girls planned a wild night of crocheting with their friends, so if the kids were going to squeeze in a sleepover at Grandpa's house it was going to have to be Sunday to Monday (because it's a long weekend).
So they planned to go up on Sunday for dinner with some of Darla's kids and grandkids. And then they'd watch some movies (a kid movie before putting Zoë and Alexander to bed and then a scary movie with the big kids because Grandpa likes scary movies (he calls them "suspenseful")) and then sleep over.
In the morning, we'd do a hike...and then return for lunch at Grandpa and Darla's and then go swimming.
Boom—weekend planned.
Benjamin informed me at church that he'd forgotten his pyjamas. This was slightly problematic because in order to get to Grandpa and Darla's house in time for dinner, the kids had planned to leave directly from the church building. But, I mean, pyjamas aren't the end of the world, so I was like, "Well, deal with it."
It's not like we hadn't told the kids precisely what to pack—a change of clothes (with underwear! because Alexander forgot underwear the last time he slept over at Grandpa's house...but had arrived in his swimsuit...so he just wore his swimsuit all weekend), pyjamas, toothbrush, swimsuit. I mean, they were all bustling around packing things Sunday morning.
"Who is going to pack the toothpaste?" I heard Benjamin.
"I will!" Zoë volunteered.
"I'll pack the melatonin!" Alexander offered.
He got out a ziplock bag and counted out three doses of melatonin. One for Zoë (the most important dose) and then one for him and Benjamin...just in case.
They seemed to be doing well.
But it turns out they all forgot their pyjamas!
And then Rachel and Miriam somehow didn't get the memo about bringing swimsuits!
And then, Andrew and I left the house en route to the trailhead, thinking that everyone else would be meeting us there. But they were blithely sitting around playing "Happy Salmon" (a card game), thinking that we were going to drive all the way to them before we all drove to the trail head together. But the park is between our house and Grandpa & Darla's house, so we had no intention of doing that.
Luckily I texted Rachel to tell her we were running a bit late but would be at the park in 5 minutes or so and she was like, "Wait...at the park??"
So they all scrambled to rush to the park (where the trailhead was) and we took our sweet time to get there (stopping at a gas station to fill the van and take Phoebe potty). We arrived within minutes of each other.
I got out of the van—in my swimsuit—and the kids were all like, "Why are you in your swimsuit?!"
"There's a waterfall at the end of the hike," I said. "Remember...we talked about this..."
"We did not!" Rachel said.
"Benjamin—we totally talked about this!" I said. "Because remember you wanted to do that other hike."
"You can't swim at that hike."
"I know! But that other hike was farther away for Grandpa and Darla, so we picked this one and you can swim at this hike. I showed you pictures. I told you to pack your swimsuits for the hike..."
"Oh, yeah..."
So, it was a morning filled with miscommunication, but in the end we made it and it was a beautiful day for hiking, given the season (which is still hot).
Our first point of interest was this sand mine:
Friday, August 30, 2024
Two times TODAY where reading has undone me
Number one
We are reading Anne of Green Gables for school right now. I didn't precisely go into the school year with a plan. We read a non-fiction book about the Great Famine in Ireland, and then read Nory Ryan's Song, a historical fiction account, mostly because that's a topic Zoë's been curious about.
And then we read Kwame Alexander's Door of No Return because it's nominated for the Georgia Children's Book Award this year and...that's kind of my job. It is set somewhat contemporaneously to Nory Ryan's Song (within 20 years).
And then I had picked out Anne of Green Gables for a nighttime read with my big kids, but they selected a different book (Good Different, another book on the GCBA list). But I just feel like there's no bad time to read Anne of Green Gables, really. Plus it's set within 20 years of Door of No Return, so it's somewhat contemporaneous...right?
At any rate the kids have been working on their spooky stories and using rich description to invite their readers into their story. What better mentor text than Anne of Green Gables for that?
Zoë started her story with a rather bland sentence: It. Was. October.
She started reading Anne of Green Gables and her revision and suddenly "the October sun" is "shimmering" through the leaves, "casting suspicious shadows" on the path.
Delightful. Thanks, L. M. Montgomery!
Thursday, August 29, 2024
Math and Brownies
Wednesday, August 28, 2024
Inland tsunamis
"is our house bolted to the foundation mom (I finished the book about tsunamis by the way)"