bathed in light

 

Oct 2013 wales morning web-2

Oct 2013 wales morning web

"God…made childhood joyous, full of life, bubbling over with laughter, playful, bright and sunny. We should put into their childhood days just as much sunshine and gladness, just as much cheerful pleasure as possible.  

Pour in the sunshine about them in youth.  Let them be happy, encourage all innocent joy, provide pleasant games for them, romp and play with them; be a child again among them. Then God's blessing will come upon your home, and your children will grow up sunny-hearted, gentle, affectionate, joyous themselves and joy-bearers to the world."

Homemaking, Rev. JR Miller

 

Of lists and leaves

 

“October proved a riot a riot to the senses

and climaxed those giddy last weeks before Halloween.” 

Kurt Donahue


pumpkins web

 

I am not sure giddy is the prevailing adjective for me this week.  Giddy sounds way more appealing than frazzled however so I am going to aim for that instead. : )  

There are appointments to get to, calls to make, dogs to be groomed, hair to be cut, apples to be processed, cakes to be delivered, latin to be memorized, and costumes to be finished this month. My suitcase is actually still packed from our last trip.  Fortunately there was a washer at the cabin so they were laundered and folded before packing but nevertheless, they are lingering in the luggage.  I have taken note of that every morning as I pass them…

Up side is we have purchased bridesmaids gowns for the girls.  We have several round, fat pumpkins sitting at the steps waiting to be carved.  Abbie Rose is learning to read. I finished a book, picked up the very awesome vintage swing coat above, and one bathroom is sparkly clean.

  The ends of my days are not seeing me with a completed to do list but I am clocking out and sitting with my husband either way. I am picking red berries and making hot pumpkin drinks. 

October won't wait for us to finish our lists you know. 

Portugese Sunrise

 

So… Portugal. I didn't tell anyone we were even going until the trip week was upon us.  We planned to take this trip two years ago. I spent it in the hospital instead. Though we have gone many places since, somehow this trip just struck a little fear in my heart, remembering. It felt a little jinxy to mention it as certainly as I had then.  My body did fight back some on this trip but we made it and we saw so many beautiful things.  The best moments traveling together are these though – the together part. While we love the big family trips, these shorter adventures with just a few of the kids make for a gift of one on one time with them. 

I am really grateful my guys were game for getting up in the wee hours to walk to the marina with me to watch the sun come up over the water. I have spent so many years stealing every moment of sleep possible – since they are always elusive in our family. It's sort of counterintuitive for me to set the clock on vacation, but it was so very worth it. We were alone on the boardwalk, save for a few early morning runners, and it was magically still. 

 

Oct 2013 lisbon sunrise web

 

Oct 2013 lisbon sunrise web-2

 

Oct 2013 lisbon sunrise web-12

 

Oct 2013 lisbon sunrise web-6

Oct 2013 lisbon sunrise web-7

Oct 2013 lisbon sunrise web-5

 

Oct 2013 lisbon sunrise web-3

 

Oct 2013 lisbon sunrise web-2-2

Well, it was magically still until Kieran was completely awake and feeling his oats. ; ) 

 

Oct 2013 lisbon sunrise web-8

Oct 2013 lisbon sunrise web-9

Oct 2013 lisbon sunrise web-10
The other awesome part about traveling with my guys?  They carry my stuff.  I owe you one, Aidan!

Under the apple trees

 

“My troubles are all over, and I am at home; and often before I am quite awake, I fancy I am still in the orchard at Birtwick, standing with my friends under the apple trees.” 

– Anna Sewell, Black Beauty

I imagine I will fancy myself standing among these trees long after we leave this farm. I will close my eyes and see boys tossing apples to each other, dogs chasing after. Juice dripping down smiling chins. This is a blessing.

 

Sept 2013 apples web

Sept 2013 apples web-2
Sept 2013 apples web-3
Sept 2013 apples web-4

living and learning lately

 

So this was September in a nutshell:

 

doing geo-puzzles EVERY school day

then coloring coordinating maps

measuring the distance between countries in South America (B's idea when he figured out how the map key works)

making tortillas – because we were hungry, but they tied in nicely with above

pattern block cards –  oh magnetic pattern blocks, where have you been all my life?

picking apples – making applesauce

math games - they've become wild for anything involving dice

playing British football.  Five days a week. Think: little league in the States.  High school football in Texas.  Somethin' like that. Jury is still out….

discovering the source of the unholy smell in the closet wall (hint – disproportionate size to smell ratio) 

geometry.  Just geometry.  It gets its own line. This helps.

caves of Lascaux impromptu project – there was an article years ago called How a Textbook Mom Does Unit Studies.  I would be like the inverse of that.  I am a unit study mom doing textbooks.  I try to pull out easy projects to go along.  This went with the prehistory chapter.  We lined a closet in brown paper. 

and… planning all the trips in October.

 

Sept 2013 school web-5

Sept 2013 school web-6

Sept 2013 school web-7

Sept 2013 school web-12

Sept 2013 school web

Sept 2013 sibs web

Sept 2013 school web-8

Sept 2013 school web-4

Sept 2013 school web-2

Sept 2013 school web-14

Sept 2013 school web-15

Sept 2013 school web-9

Sept 2013 school web-10

Sept 2013 school web-11

Sept 2013 school web-13

 

The orchard in the morning

 

They have a saying in Suffolk, England,–

"At Michaelmas time, or a little before,
Half an apple goes to the core."

Wild Apples, Thoreau

 

I have no crafts nor helpful hints to share. We began some feast day projects but they remain unfinished. Too many things vying for our time this month.

Instead of busy-ness I marked this change of season with a walk through the orchard one very early morning before the children were even awake. It was the first really foggy morning this autumn and I have missed those.  I wandered out among the trees, stepping carefully between the tiny mushrooms, getting the hem of my pajama pants wet from the dew. 

The day promised to be as impossibly full as those that will follow for a little while, but it started with a deep breath. 

 

Sept 2013 orchard web-4

Sept 2013 orchard web-3

Sept 2013 orchard web

Sept 2013 orchard web-2

stop, drop, and roll

 

 

 fire web

 

We are so busy.  Like, so busy that I am sitting here at midnight blogging because I don't want to forget these days.  But I'm telling you they are cram packed right now.  School is in full swing and there is a lotta math happening. I am willing to bet I am muttering mathematical jibberish in my sleep. We are giving British football a whirl (more to follow) and we are seeing as much as we can on days off.  Which brings me to these pictures, totally out of order with other recent trips, but since these are fresh and I am still smiling I am starting here.

It's my blog.  I can wreck it up however I want right? 

 

Sept 2013 fire web-3

Sept 2013 fire web-2

There were about a million and one things we should have been doing this weekend.  Laundry figured prominently among them.  Instead, we decided to take the children to a function at the flight line.  They toured the fire trucks and got to spray the hoses. 

Sept 2013 fire web-4

Sept 2013 fire web-7

Sept 2013 fire web-5

Sept 2013 fire web-6

 

At the end of the presentations they got to get up close and personal with this beauty.  She helps drive other birds off the runway to keep them from getting caught up in the airplane engines. 

Funny note of the day – the littles were really nervous about climbing up into the fire truck.  But then they ran to the front of the line to pet the giant bird with the wicked talons who spreads her wings over your head on command.  No explaining some things <g>  Guess we're outdoorsy.

 

 

Sept 2013 fire web-9


I hope your year is off to fabulous start as well.  I have not worked this hard in a lot of years but it feels really good.  Everyone is super enthusiastic and while some of these upper level classes are stretching our brains a bit it is a blessing to walking this road together. 

a housewifely wish

"Fired a with housewifely wish to see her storeroom stocked with homemade preserves, she undertook to put up her own currant jelly. John was requested to order home a dozen or so of little pots and an extra quantity of sugar, for their own currants were ripe and were to be attended to at once… Home came four dozen delightful little pots, half a barrel of sugar, and a small boy to pick the currants for her.

With her pretty hair tucked into a little cap, arms bared to the elbow, and a checked apron which had a coquettish look in spite of the bib, the young housewife fell to work, feeling no doubts about her success… She did her best, she asked advice of Mrs. Cornelius, she racked her brain to remember what Hannah did that she left undone, she reboiled, resugared, and restrained, but that dreadful stuff wouldn't `jell'.

She longed to run home, bib and all, and ask Mother to lend her a hand, but John and she had agreed that they would never annoy anyone with their private worries, experiments, or quarrels. They had laughed over that last word as if the idea it suggested was a most preposterous one, but they had held to their resolve, and whenever they could get on without help they did so, and no one interfered, for Mrs. March had advised the plan. So Meg wrestled alone with the refractory sweetmeats all that hot summer day, and at five o'clock sat down in her topsy-turvey kitchen, wrung her bedaubed hands, lifted up her voice and wept."

Little Women



jelly web-2


It can do that to you, jelly.  That syrupy stuff clinging tenaciously to every pot, spoon, counter, doorknob.  Gelling everyplace except in jars.  I tend to be a bit over-confident and underestimate how much skill and time a job takes. Jelly making was one of those jobs.  

In the end we had some crab apple jelly and some crab apple syrup.  I was a bit dscouraged until I spoke with the landlord.  He asked which trees we used.  Turned out one of them was not "a proper crab" after all but some unbelievably tiny little apples.  That same day I came upon a garden with rows of tomatoes – every last one leggy, nearly leafless, and tall and full of clusters of tiny tomatoes.  Just like ours.  So the second lesson of the week was that I had been expecting an American results from British produce. (which is wonderful in it's own way, just different)

We learn and we learn about all sorts of things we didn't expect to learn about. So life, isn't it?  

 

 jelly web