Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Which time and place do you belong in?

Modern USA

You are somewhat religious, believe in freedom and liberty, but have issues with other nations who have a different outlook on freedom.

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How well do you know your colors?

Your Score: 30%
F

Fail. You win a box of cheap, crappy crayons. You're not even worth Crayolas.

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Can You Name The Breeds Of Dog?

Your Score: 46%
F

Disappointing. You hardly know what a dog is!

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(I did get the Pyrs correct)

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Kuza

I refuse to address the "you were never getting a dog ever again" folks ;)

Taliesin would much prefer a mouse as a new pet. He's not amused by Kuza.. none of the cats are.. but Kuza is used to cats so he really doesn't care. The farm where we bought him had the pups (and adults) living with the goats and oodles of barn cats.


His markings are called "badger" colorings.. in most great pyrenees they completely disappear in adulthood leaving a pure white dog. I like the colorings, maybe his will stay?

The puppy was the main attraction right out of bed. Here Naomi is feeding him some puppy kibble while still in her PJs. He is a very mellow puppy (currently!) and the littles are enjoying him as well as the older children.


Kuza is around 25lbs or so currently. He's a -very- large puppy. I need to get his birthdate from the breeder, but I believe he's around 10-12 weeks old. He's still adjusting and I can hopefully get better pictures later.

http://www.greatpyrenees.com/

He'll be around 100-120lbs in adulthood. His parents are very well-trained for guarding livestock, so I'm hoping he will 1) keep things from eating the poultry and 2) imprint on the children/family in as the house guardian.

Btw, he was the easiest dog overnight. He slept. Peacefully. No whining or fuss at all.

Monday, November 17, 2008

I'm not crunchy...

I've decided that I'm not crunchy, even though I do many of things that crunchy people do. :) And some of you are saying "What in the world is crunchy?"

I have noticed that many of the large, frugal families do the same.

  • Homebirth - many choose this option because it's often cheaper (for us it was $3K more!) and after a certain number of children, it doesn't seem so strange. We realize babies are born even if there isn't a doctor in the room. Others go a step further and have baby unassisted.
  • Homeschool - we started for academics, realized we'd continue due to faith, and then also added in the fact we like the tone it creates for our family. Not sure if this counts as crunchy, but it does raise eyebrows in some areas. Thankfully, in our area, it is seen as pretty normal. Unschooling raises eyebrows. Relaxed homeschool does too. But it makes me wondering why we see M-F school in a building as normal. Or the idea that children spend most of their waking hours in school and -then- do homework on top of that. Most adults would freak if they worked their 40hrs and then more at home. What's the goal to all of this? Why can't it be done in a different manner? What do we want for our children, really? Has institutionalized schooling changed our country? World? Yeah, I'm getting more crunchy in this respect because I believe that character comes first. Having a *good* childhood is also important.. and whether my children can point out the Black Sea on the map or know the meaning of idiosyncrantic isn't going to make or break me as a parent. (They know how to use the dictionary. The world is their oyster.) I think most people choose traditional school because it's the way it has always been done.. they get pressure from family.. or they see it as a 'break' from their children. (Not a supermom, I love breaks as well.)
  • Reuse, reduce, recycle - I don't recycle, much. It's a pain where I live because wild critters get into the bin. I do reuse. A lot. A whole lot. I have baby clothes that have gone through some of my kids, some of my friend's kids, back to me, and then out again. The back deck is being converted into a poultry house. Most of my homeschool materials are non-consumable. None of this is about being crunchy. It is about being cheap. :) A lot of our stuff comes used from goodwill or friends. And we pass it on. Buying bulk also means less packaging.. using dried beans (cheap) instead of canned. Buying the large thing of oats and so on.
Anyway, we're entering a new stage here. The children and I are looking into urban homesteading. We do live in a rural area, but don't have a gazillion acres to work with. We have a bit under 2 acres of cleared land, minus the footprint for the house and the front area where we have a treeline between us and the road. Jim doesn't care what we do as long as it results in less grass. Good news for him.. there is a "Grow Food, Not Grass" movement out there. We'll be trendy while we work on ditching the lawnmower! (Insert green comments here - less gas, less pollution. American perk - not giving money to overseas oil companies.. but still basically comes down to being cheap ;) I'm not green or overly patriotic compared to most! My children don't even know the pledge because it seems creepy to me as a Christian. No allegiances pledged to flags or golden calves, thankyouverymuch.)

I do think we're headed towards a time like the great depression. Many who predicted the recession, and got laughed at (although they were -right-) are saying it's still going to get worse over the next 2-3 years. So while we may miss out on memorizing the countries in alphabetical order, we will be learning some valuable life skills.

Things I'm looking into:

  • Poultry. I love guinea hens and look forward to those again. However, we really do need chickens because guineas do not lay enough or reliably. I'm looking at plymouth rock or black star, depending upon availability. The girls really like the bantam silkies. Maybe a few of those for decoration. ;) I have a spot for them, but do like the idea of chicken tractors, especially some that can set on the 4x4 gardens.
  • Gardens. Raised beds actually, I am looking to use block instead of wood because the wood rots quickly here.. I think it also attracts fire ants. (Carla Emory says to use boiling water, so we'll give that a go instead of chemicals.) During the winter I plan to see how many I can get ready. I like the Square Foot Gardening book, there is an updated version available. All New Square Foot Gardening
  • Goats.. maybe.. eventually.
  • Which leads to learning more about canning, freezing, and other ways of storing.
We were hoping to get a Dutch Valley Co-op going here. I might shop at Sams while waiting on that.. I wish they had a source for bulk black beans.

Anyway, that's my post for now. We're a little mixed up this week due to lots of people having colds.. including our little Queen. She's a handful (well, armful) when sick and we do lots of "Pass the Baby" so she can be held.

Chili that looks like meat-flavored chili.. but isn't:

1 large bag black beans
1 bag light red kidney beans
1 bag dark red kidney beans
1 large jug tomato juice
2 cans tomato paste
seasonings (salt, pepper, lots of chili powder, garlic, red pepper, etc.)

Rinse beans, pick out stones, put into 6qt crock overnight. Next day, take out 1/3 of beans to be used in something else. *grins* (Unless you actually have the right amount. I had too many. I added garlic and such to those to cook).

Add in the tomato juice, paste, and seasonings. Cook on high for most of day. When the beans are squishy use a potato masher to squish some up - this makes it thicker and it looks like meat.

We served it over cornbread (made from scratch, simple recipe I can post sometime.) It was very good. It made enough for dinner and today the leftovers are being used for a second dinner. It works nice over baked potatoes or with elbow macaroni and cheese mixed in.

I typed on this post off and on all day.. in between math, talks about Alexander the Great, reading instruction, loving the baby, wiping up spills, changing diapers, checking out Obstetric Myths Versus Research Realities and more.. it might be jumbled.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Another day at co-op

Last week the focus was on China, which brought out lots of dragon ideas! Some of the children made an abacus (not pictured, but I'll have to find one later) which was fun.





Naomi pauses for a picture while coloring a page.



She adores J's daughters.. but insisted the baby shouldn't wear a hat.



We took a friend with us to co-op, he's in the red/white striped shirt. Here they are busy decorating their dragons to turn into paper dragons later.


More painting and more of Julia's school room (it is a great place to hold co-op!) Olivia loves on her baby (with hat).



Nathan and his paper dragon. Auburn drew the heads for the younger children to decorate.



You guessed it.. more dragon decorating..


I just realized that most of us were in red for co-op. I guess it was a .. (very bad political joke coming up.. sorry!) reaction to the election. Ahem. Anyway, Bethany gets a hug while it looks like Naomi is making a break for it. Gracie is thinking hard about her art. :)



They are practicing Chinese calligraphy. Auburn taught on the board while the children copied it.



Joseph shows off his paper dragon.


Here is James' dragon in progress, Auburn drew the heads/tails. (Yes, Dad, I know he needs his hair cut again!)


This week.. Aztecs and Mayans.. we'll maybe try some ball in the backyard and then decide what to do with the losers...

Other news:

The older girls are both involved in www.nanowrimo.com for the young authors program and enjoying it a LOT. We've roasted at dozens of marshmallows over the past few days as we use the fireplace.. and.. I trimmed Noah's bangs. What an exciting life we lead here in SC.