Favorite Preschool Supplier – Home Depot : )

100_1346You probably got a hint of this already but let me lay it out for you – I am cheap.  I have an awfully hard time buying anything that could concievably be made.  And even some things that can’t lol!  <g>  This has led to some botched construction projects but also some great successes.  My favorite preschool and early elementary books are by Labritta Gilbert and Mary Baratta-Lorton, probably because these women had a gift for using common materials in uncommon ways.  After seeing their ideas you stop looking at hardware and you start seeing fine motor perfectors.  You stop seeing lumber and start seeing manipulatives.

100_1345_5100_1347These are a few of the materials we have made from these books. (see sidebar) The first is a lacing bar.  Next is the pegboard.  They use golf tees to make patterns. Before we had the board we poked a series of hole around the outside of a bowl’s plastic lid.  That worked well too.  The 100_1348bolt board is new for us.  Before Allen made it we had a bowl of nuts and bolts in various sizes and they worked with them that way, which worked fine also. This is a bit easier for the smaller boys though.  The braiding board is an 18" 1×2 board with a hole drilled at the top and cording pulled through.  This is more of an elementary task.

Texas Ranch House – PBS

Asher, ever on top of the PBS schedule <g>, tipped me off that a new series starts this week – Texas Ranch House. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/ranchhouse/  He knows all too well I tend to obsess over this series.  At least the Pioneer House, which I watched at least 3 times all through lol! Canadian public broadcasting also produced a similar excellent series with two couples who spent a year on the prairie.  I will reserve my judgement on this one til we see the first episode.  Colonial House was a bust.  Totally unrealistic and in fact scandalous, in part due to their inability to abide by Puritan beliefs and chain of command.  Victorian House was similarly less than stellar – lots of whining.  Ok so WWII House wasnt so hot either…… 

BUT hey, I saw the previews of this one and they have no trees, lots of dirt, baby goats, and a fly infestation come summer.  THIS I can relate to! ; D 

Speaking  of baby goats, we tried our hands at disbudding yesterday.  Words cannot describe this horrific job. Disbudding sounds so innocuous doesn’t it?  Sorta gives one the image of pinching off flower buds from a stem.  Not so.  It’s a euphamism for searing off the horn buds before they grow into lethal weapons. 

Fiascofarm.com tried to prepare us for the task. There is only so much that can be said however and reality was every bit as raw and unpleasant as their description.  First the kids get a haircut around the horn area. That was a piece of cake. We then wrapped them in a towel since we didnt have a kid-holding box. (yes they make these things)  and laid them on a table.  Two of us held the kid while Allen burned off the horns one at time.  All the while Fiasco’s words about brain damage ran through our heads and we were terrified about *frying their brains*.  Never mind the ‘what-in-the-name-of-all-that-is-good are you DOING to me’ squeals they let out.  Wow!  A necessary evil perhaps, but hands down the worst job we have done on the ranch. 

One interesting observation in the whole thing was the difference in the way each of the kids responded.  The does have an awesome mamma and they fought like mad and made a huge fuss. They were appalled (and rightly so) and their mamma consoled them afterwards.  The bucks who came out of our yearling fussed less.  In fact the little guy, whom the mamma hasnt been too affectionate towards, made next to no noise and seemed to just close his eyes and give up.  His mamma didnt even look up when he came back to the pasture.  That was heart wrenching.  It did cause me to make connections with real children however.  I hope we are raising kids who will fight like mad when faced with injustice and who know they can always return to the fold of home for solace.