Category Archives: field trips

Worms, field trips, and some plans for the future

Yesterday morning, the kids and I went on a field trip that I haven’t been able to stop thinking about since.  It was actually only the first stop in one of those crazybusyexhaustingbutfun kind of days –  the kind that had us leaving the house at 9:00 AM and not returning until 6:30 PM – but it’s the stop that won’t leave my mind.

We toured a city home whose owners had transformed it into a sustainable, completely eco-friendly living space.   And it was awesome.  I will always hold out hope that we’ll have a nice piece of land again someday (sometimes it still befuddles me that a country girl like me wound up in a city the size of Phoenix, of all places) but yesterday’s tour reminded me that I don’t have to have a big chunk of land in order to make some huge – and hugely impactful – changes to the way we live.

On this less than 8,000 square foot plot, this family utilized:

They also had chickens; an outdoor shower; many edible, multi-functional and indigenous plants;  bee blocks;  a small greenhouse; rebar shade structures… and much more that I’m forgetting.  The entire space was careful and deliberately designed, and nothing – not so much as a drop of rainwater – was wasted.

All right there on this little plot, in a regular old neighborhood, right in the middle of a city.

Inspiring.

I came home filled with ideas, and looking at our current housing situation with new perspective.   Lately we’ve been talking about the possibility of moving again (locally) and have been sifting through our options.  Unfortunately, because like so many millions of other Americans right now we are woefully underwater on our house, our options are few.   We’re starting at the only place we can start, by culling our clutter, organizing our finances, and getting the house ready for someone who will really love it.  When we do move (and I say “when” instead of “if” because I believe it will happen) if we can recreate even half of what this beautiful family has designed, I will be happy.

2 Comments

Filed under eco, field trips, inspirational, life, passions, pets, plans

Eden Garden House


Leave a Comment

Filed under field trips, projects

The Zoo

Phoenix Zoo, December 2005
Phoenix Zoo, April 2011

Pictured above are the boys at the zoo for their very first visit, one month after we moved here…. and at the zoo today – along with the girl – for their (??) visit.  It’s still just as fun as it was 5 1/2 years ago.

Leave a Comment

Filed under adventures, field trips, memories

As For Me and My House, We Will Slurp

Konnichiwa.
 
Today the kids and I joined a big group of homeschoolers for a field trip to the Japanese Friendship Garden in downtown Phoenix.  I believe it was my personal favorite field trip to date.  I love the serenity, the calmness, and the simple, simple beauty.  The woman who led our tour was wonderful, incredibly patient and kind with the kids, and was able to keep their interest the entire time (no small task when you’re dealing with such a large group of children ranging in age from 2 to 15!)

She taught us a few Japanese phrases, told us about their customs and superstitions, led the kids across some stones on the water, and let them feed the koi fish.  (Did you know that koi fish have no stomachs?) 

Otherwise, we just wandered and enjoyed the beauty of the gardens.  

And finally, one of the last organized stops we made at the garden was outside the tea house, where we learned about many of the Japanese customs regarding their rituals of drinking tea. From the kind of tea they drink, to the bowl they drink it out of, to the manner in which they drink it. My favorite part was hearing about how, when they’re down to the bottom of the bowl and have nothing left but frothy foam (because they whisk the tea all up with a bamboo brush) that good manners dictate that they loudly slurp their last sip.

I can’t explain how much I love that… that a culture that is so beautifully refined, so peaceful, so polite.. sees the value in a good, old-fashioned slurp.  Life should be lived.  Drinks should be slurped.  So many people want to stop their kids from slurping (both literally and metaphorically),  but to a Japanese person drinking tea, not only is slurping okay, it is expected.  Not only is it expected, but it would be considered impolite not to slurp.

And you know those plaques that people hang in their house, the ones that say, “As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord”? Well, I believe in serving the Lord. But I also believe in “living deep and sucking all the marrow out of life.” (Thoreau) I believe in eating foods that are messy and letting the juice run down my arms. I believe in dancing in the rain, splashing in puddles, and feeling mud squish between my toes.

And I believe in slurping.

Oyasumi nasai.

1 Comment

Filed under field trips, simplifying

Fish, Mud, and Puberty

Last week, we joined a group of homeschoolers and checked out the new aquarium here in the valley. We clearly weren’t the only ones with the same idea, as it was crazy and crowded. We all enjoyed it though, and look forward to going back someday when it’s not as busy (ie: when it’s not still newly opened and 110 degrees outside)

I was catching up with a friend while the kids played in the playground area.  She asked me how we’d been doing, and I answered with my fairly standard, “Good.  Busy.”  “What have you been busy with?”

Stumped.

What have I been busy with?  So much of it is just… life. Life with an active two year old who’s in my arms a large portion of the day.  Life with a busy six year old and a driven nine year old and an inquisitive thirteen year old.  There’s school (my school) and summer movies, and playdates, and an endless list of weekend activities.  The days are quickly getting away from me, and I continually need to remind myself to breathe, to soak it in, to take the time to sleep, shower, go to the bathroom ENJOY IT.

On Saturday, we took the kids to something called Mighty Mud Mania.  Apparently it’s an annual event, but this is the first I’d heard of it.  It’s only been going on for 35 years, so you can see where I’d have trouble. But now I know, so we went.  It was a long, hot, and fun day.

I’ve noticed lately – when I’m going through my hundreds and hundreds of snapshots that I’ve taken at various places – that there are far fewer current pictures of Spencer than the other three.  I was somewhat wracked with guilt and confusion over this (why am I excluding one of my children?!) until I realized why.  He’s either beside me when I’m taking them, or he’s off doing his own thing…. unless it’s 3 in the afternoon, in which case he’s sleeping on the couch.  He’s at “that” age right now, that in-between, not quite a kid/not quite a teenager age.  When we were at the mud event, he enjoyed himself, but didn’t really want to do any of the activities.  He was happy to hang out with us, drink his water, and watch.

I remember with great clarity – oh so painful clarity – what it was like to be thirteen.  I was awkward and confused.  I didn’t fit in anywhere.  My body was doing strange things.  I had a group of not always nice “friends” who sometimes treated me so badly that I dreaded going to school.  I was the one with frizzy hair and bad skin.  I was mercilessly taunted by older kids.  I had a tragically huge and unrequited crush on a boy who was four years older than me.  I had no idea who I was or where I was going or what I wanted.

I was not yet ME.

I share this humiliating history to show that I can fully commiserate with my barely-a-teenager son, but also to give a praise of thanks that he is so much better off than I was.   He knows who he is, and a great majority of the time he’s happy.  The friends he makes are true friends.  He has a close relationship with us, and with his grandparents.  He’s excited about life and he’s following his interests (currently that means hours at the computer, researching the ins and outs of operating a construction business) And the great torture that was provided to me at school?  Not an issue for him.  He’s able to become a young man as gracefully – and painlessly – as possible.

1 Comment

Filed under adventures, family, field trips, growing up

Krispy Kreme and other adventures


Yes, I think it’s ironic that I’m posting about a donut shop the same day I start a blog about nutrition, but nevertheless that’s where we went on Thursday. We joined a big group of homeschoolers for a tour and sample, and it was pretty neat to see the inner workings of their production.

A couple interesting facts about Krispy Kreme:

1. Their donut machine (which we were under strict orders NOT to take pictures of) costs more than our house.

2. You need to be able to lift 50 pounds to work there

3. Employees get three free donuts a day. Yikes, I’m thinking about nutrition again….

The boys really enjoyed the tour. Tegan did not, but she did appreciate the donut at the end.

Krispy Kreme was one of three field trips we have scheduled for this month. Next week we’re going on a tour of a crime lab, and the following week we’re touring the Phoenix recycling center. Cool.

T-Ball and gymnastics are both in full swing now. Everett is still the easiest one to spot in both sports, as he’s the one with the big grin on his face, waving to his parents every time he gets the chance.

1 Comment

Filed under baseball, field trips

Pretzels

Field trip to Auntie Anne’s…

Learning the ropes:


Happy in her baker’s hat:


A gaming break with some friends:


Making our own:

Delicious!

1 Comment

Filed under field trips

On the second day of Christmas, my true love gave to me…


Day 2 – a trip to the Phoenix Zoo!

Today we met friends at Zoo for a fun afternoon. No words are really needed…. they had a great time as always. On the way home, they entertained themselves (and their mother) by making up new words to The 12 Days of Christmas, using different zoo animals for each of the days.




Today’s Jesse tree ornament was a ram, to depict the story of Abraham and Isaac. Abraham was asked to sacrifice his son Isaac to prove his devotion and obedience to God. He was about to do so when God intervened and provided a ram for the sacrifice instead.

Genesis 22:11-12 “The Lord’s messenger called to him from heaven, ‘Abraham, Abraham!’ ‘Yes, Lord,’ he answered. ‘Do not lay your hand on the boy,’ said the messenger. ‘Do not do the least thing to him. I know now how devoted you are to God, since you did not withhold from me your own beloved son.”

No matter how many times I read it, I am completely awed by this story. I remember hearing it as a kid, and thinking it was powerful even back then, but I hadn’t the slightest idea of how it would affect me as parent, imagining I was asked to sacrifice my own child.

1 Comment

Filed under bible, faith, field trips

Pizza Grows in the Ground


Yesterday we met up with an old homeschool group for a trip and tour of a pumpkin farm. *Old* meaning a group that we used to belong to and have just recently reconnected with. The group isn’t old. The people in the group aren’t old either, in fact they’re mostly quite young.

What was I talking about?

Oh yes, a farm. We spent a long time wandering around the corn maze. We went on a barrel train ride, Tegan and Everett bounced in the bouncy house, and all three boys rode the pedal go-carts. They had a snack, they milked a pretend cow, and they each picked out a pumpkin to take home.

But the whole day started with a tour and explanation of their “Pizza Garden.” What an ingenious idea! Designed to show kids what goes into the makings of a pizza, it was a big circular farm divided into “slices”, and each slice had a different element of the pizza: One growing wheat for the crust, one growing tomatoes and herbs for the sauce, one housing a cow & goats for the cheese, one with two pigs (Pepper and Roni. Hee) representing the toppings. As we as a society get more and more disconnected from our food, I think it is great that they are doing their part to show kids where our food really comes from…. and that pizza doesn’t just appear in the sweaty box from Little Caesars, or in the frozen aisle at the grocery store.

The boys were excited to tell Mike about their day, and the first thing out of Everett’s mouth was “Did you know that pizza grows in the ground?”

In case I haven’t mentioned it lately, I love these kids.








2 Comments

Filed under fall, field trips, learning, unschooling