hoppin’ down the bunny trail

 

Snatches of a very good day at home and abroad.  

Or at home abroad as the case may be. : ) 

Easter weekend was chillier than usual this year but we determined to spend it outdoors nonetheless.  We took the children to Oxburgh Hall for a scavenger hunt around the grounds and throughout the hall itself.  The especially delightful part was that the event was sponsored by Cadbury which meant there was a hefty chocolate egg at the end of the hunt. That kept them all going though Abbie Rose had a few moments which tested her resolve. 

The story of the estate needs its own post and it will have that God willing. For now….

 

Mar 2013 easter web
These were responsible for my humming, "One ha'penny, two ha'penny…" all. day. long.

Mar 2013 easter web-2
Mar 2013 easter egg roll web

The boys did the easter egg roll while the little girls got their faces painted as what else? Bunnies.  There were the ears after all. 

Mar 2013 easter web-4
Mar 2013 easter web-6
Mar 2013 easter web-7
Mar 2013 easter web-5

We spent a few hours at the estate and then headed home where we had our own egg hunt, because you don't mess with traditions around here.  

Mar 2013 egg hunt abbie web

Mar 2013 easter web-8

Dinner, most of which was in the crockpot/roaster deal all day or easily made fresh. Carrots didn't actually happen at the last minute. We didn't make a plethora of food since there was all that chocolate and the pie. 

 

Mar 2013 easter menu web

Mar 2013 easter web-9
Simple and silly.  They had a very good time.  

I missed my boys.   A lot. : ) 

all this filled my days

 

To have the children near me, to occupy myself with them, to try to raise them in the noblest sense of that term and to impress on those little souls things that will never be effaced; to interest myself a bit in everyone and to make our home into a living center, to give it soul – all this filled my days.

The Secret Diary of Elisabeth Leseur

Yes, all this. 


Mar 2013 tart web

 

Mar 2013 snow web

Mar 2013 stations web_

Mar 2013 drawing web

Mar 2013 easter garden web
Mar 2013 easter garden 2 web

Espresso Bundt Cake

 

Mar 2013 dessert web-2

We had dinner with friends today and had planned to make a tiramisu cake until we realized there had been a marscapone mishap.  Some quick thinking resulted in this moist espresso flavored chocolate bundt cake which was just as well.  I have been feeling nostalgic for vintage desserts and my bundt pan has been left forlorn in the recesses of the storage cabinet for too long. 

This cake is a part of a bigger circle of friendship. A few days earlier I came home to find a dozen eggs left by an older local woman I have come to know.  She has what they call a "small holding" nearby, the equivalent of an American hobby farm.  We talked of chickens and dairy goats when we visited over the gate a couple weeks ago.  It really warmed my heart to see my name penned on the carton.  I have smiled with every egg I have cracked from it and a couple of them went into this dessert. 

Mar 2013 eggs web

the white snow lay in many a place

 

Daffy-down-dilly came up in the cold,
  Through the brown mould
Although the March breeze blew keen on her face,
Although the white snow lay in many a place.

Anna Warner—Daffy-Down-Dilly.

 

We thought maybe it was just us, but it seems this is the coldest March that the British have seen in some 50 years and they aren't enjoying it any more than we.  It would make no difference to me really, except the daffodils were just beginning to bloom. I have been looking forward to seeing the explosion of color along the road where there are mounds of daff's all budded out and just beginning to open.  Very sad to see those yellow blossoms in the garden drooping under the falling snow this afternoon.

 

Mar 2013 daffodils snow web-3

Mar 2013 daffodils snow web-2
Mar 2013 daffodils snow web

hands on geography fun

 

Our homeschool group's history/geography fair was this week which triggered a pinning blitz for me on pinterest. That netted some great ideas which tied in perfectly with the littles' geography studies.  

The first was our take on the Me on the Map project I saw several places. (based on this book)  The children cut their own circles from old cereal boxes so they are a little wonky but really sturdy.  They are going to make awesome manipulatives for some time.  

Feb 2013 geog fair us web_-4

Feb 2013 geog fair us web_-6
Feb 2013 geog fair us web_-5

Konos has a similar project but they used envelopes in graduated sizes which fit inside one another.  A flip book works too.  Any way you choose to do it you begin with a picture of the child and his home then add layers (pages, larger envelopes etc) of the following: his street, city, state/province, country, continent, world.  

Feb 2013 geog fair us web_

Then because I tend to overshoot they were so darn cute we made a set of continent cookies.  Actually this project was spearheaded by Moira and Aidan and was their contribution to the fair.  

Feb 2013 geog fair us web_-2
Feb 2013 geog fair us web_-3

The hardest part (I mean of course the hardest part aside from finding the project and deciding to make it the day of the fair. ; )) ended up being finding a set of continent templates that were the right size but still sorta to scale. Our world puzzle was too large.  We ended up using maps from montessorimaterials.org.  Aidan cut them and used them as a guide to cut the cookie dough. (recipe here)

They cookies held their shape well so the outlines stayed fairly true. We iced them in traditional Montessori colors and used this recipe which dried nice and glossy and firm.  They were a big hit and the kids were proud of themselves.  

Feb 2013 geog fair us web_-7
You can totally teach geography without these.  Totally. But I think some version of the Me on the Map project is really worth the time to do to help give more concrete understanding of what are often really abstract concepts of place and scale. 

sounds like a…

 

Wow.  This last week has knocked us out. So much packed into everyday. I have pictures of some really fabulous school and food projects, but am too tuckered out to link tonight after having made it all. : )  It's coming though, sometime after sleep and my husband's work shirts getting ironed.  If you have emailed me in the past several days, and heard me mention that, you might be thinking to yourself, "Good golly, is that woman STILL ironing?"  Well, no.  I haven't actually gotten started.  

We did get a new car worked out, had a history/geography fair, an Irish dance workshop, and a few sick kids.  Therefore the wrinkles are still waiting for me.

They're good like that. 

Grateful tonight for a set of littles who find life as fascinating as I do and are so easy to amuse, entertain, and educate.  Such an easy trio they are. 

 

Feb 2013 bird song web_-2

Feb 2013 bird song web_-5
Feb 2013 bird song web_-4

Feb 2013 bird song web_-3

 

edited to add: The bird song bird is here and only reasonable used it appears. 

7 Quick Takes

 

7_quick_takes_sm1

1. First week of lent coming to a close.  It's gone by fast all things considered. I feel we are in better shape than we were a week ago. I had a long talk with myself this week and made an honest assessment of what needed tightening up and set about doing it.  I saw this list of cooking habits and one point in particular seemed relevent to other household and homeschool tasks – have all your ingredients (supplies) laid out before you begin the steps.  Yes.  As in, Kim, do not go get an idea off the net during the day and attempt to implement it right. then.  Don't.  

So with that mantra ringing in my ears I am stepping back, NOT making a lot, and working on the infrastructure – craft supplies and kitchen supplies.  I know it will make us more productive later. Right now its making me itch to DO something.  

Else. 

2. There is a delightful elderly woman in our chapel who adores our children and has clearly looked for ways to bless them.  This past Sunday she brought us a neatly handdrawn chart on graph paper which she used with her own children many, many years ago to track lenten sacrifices and the journey to the cross.  It may be one of the dearest things we have ever received.  So dear, I cannot find the photo of it. Being straight with you. See #1 above. 

3. The boys and I have been going through their history and art appreciation together which has led to some incredible (short, sweet, thankyouwiki) rabbit trails.  This week it was the Reign of Terror and the uprising in the Vendee.  I admit I am getting a lot more out of homeschool lessons these days than I did the first round or two of kids.  Guessing that sleeping through the night has something to do with it.  This has been seriously fascinating though and somehow just having me read it with them is making it pretty amazing for them too. 

4. The incredible Snickers cupcakes. Oh my.  So, Alannah had her first work function that required bringing food.  No one had signed up for cupcakes.  Score! She was determined these had to be like, world class cupcakes.  I think they were that. She has graduated to making her own cake batter from scratch with all her quirky special additions.  Then she filled them with a caramel/candy filling. Topped them with a nougat copycat type frosting, chopped candy bars, and melted caramel sauce.  People are still coming up to her.  In fact my husband took some to work and people have stopped her in the halls to discuss them.  

cupcakes web
 cupcakes web-2

I say all this because what this did for her was to validate her progress over the past few years.  She had a pretty good idea she was developing some mad kitchen skills but that outside objective affirmation helps you know when you are solidly out the gate with a hobby. It just makes me happy for her. It's not about the cupcakes, know what I mean? 

5. Speaking of which, I saw this Ira Glass quote a while back.  Then again last week when a friend who is a digital artist shared it with her response to questions like, "How do you do that?"  It reminded me of a quote poster I have seen which says, "Don't compare your beginning to someone else's middle."  The most important piece of the puzzle whether in a craft, hobby, skill, – knitting, baking, photography, home organization, parenting you-name-it is experience.  Lots of it. Lots of time.  Lots of experimentation.  Lots of messing up.  We shouldn't be discouraged if people who have been doing a thing for a lot longer are doing it better.  Anything you stick with will become exponentially easier as years go by.  This is what I tell myself as well because while some things are infinitely easier these days, there are also things that 30 yo women are proficient at which I am just now getting around to figuring out since I was broke and knee deep in diapers and military life when I was that. So lets read it again together:

“Nobody tells this to people who are beginners, I wish someone told me. All of us who do creative work, we get into it because we have good taste. But there is this gap. For the first couple years you make stuff, it’s just not that good. It’s trying to be good, it has potential, but it’s not. But your taste, the thing that got you into the game, is still killer. And your taste is why your work disappoints you. A lot of people never get past this phase, they quit. Most people I know who do interesting, creative work went through years of this. We know our work doesn’t have this special thing that we want it to have. We all go through this. And if you are just starting out or you are still in this phase, you gotta know its normal and the most important thing you can do is do a lot of work. Put yourself on a deadline so that every week you will finish one story. It is only by going through a volume of work that you will close that gap, and your work will be as good as your ambitions. And I took longer to figure out how to do this than anyone I’ve ever met. It’s gonna take awhile. It’s normal to take awhile. You’ve just gotta fight your way through.” 
― Ira Glass

6. On that same note a word about Pinterest.  I love it. I have read a lot of Pinterest bashing lately.  It shows beautiful things.  Apparently if you cannot recreate the beautiful things, just as beautifully, you will sink into the depths of depression. Phooey, I say.  When I look at a Rembrandt I don't cover my head in shame comparing myself.  I admire.  I analyze what it is that works in the piece and try to see if that applies to other crafts – the way light falls, the color palatte, the mood.  Ditto Pinterest.  I may never make everything I have pinned.  That isn't my goal. I might not create that gray and orange living room with the chevron pillows (which I love) for instance, but those elements would make a great outfit or an awesome binder set.  That's just how my brain works though.  

7. Some several happy minutes were passed over here this week.  Just go and soak up the joy.  And see this beautiful space.   I am totally using these ideas.  You know, after the infrastructure stuff is done.  I promise. 

5 a day

 

Or more : )  

I had proclaimed around New Years' a year ago that it was the dawn of the Year of the Vegetable.  But, it wasn't really. It was perhaps a year of not-terribly-bad-choices but with too-many-compromises. There were many reasons for that, not the least of which was that my stomach was quite unhappy and unsettled coming off the hospitalization.  As lent began this year however, it felt like a good time to redouble my dietary efforts, to return to a largely grain free plan for me and to a produce-rich menu for all.  

Our landlord has been a huge help in this project, as he has been keeping us supplied with the surplus veggies he trades with local farmers.  The local farmers often drop off extras at each other's doors.  Whatever they can't eat our landlord brings to us.  

Blessing, you say?  HUGE blessing. 

This is what was left in the conservatory last week. 


Feb 2013 vegs web
Feb 2013 vegs web-2
Feb 2013 vegs web-3

This is a typical breakfast of late.  One egg cheese omelette, grapes, peppers (which ended up with Tess because my stomach still doesn't like them) and a smoothie. 

Feb 2013 vegs web-4

Lunch today was tomato soup with cottage cheese and an apple.  Chai latte. 

Dinner tonight was simple roast chicken (2), roasted carrots and parsnips, brussels sprouts, and rice.   

So far so good.  Hopefully that was nutritionally impressive enough to share Alannah's latest cupcake adventures later this week.  She brought two incredible creations to her potluck at work after which her coworkers demanded to know what the heck she was doing working THERE lol.  We picked up a wonderful patisserie instruction cookbook and are beginning to assemble the tools for working through it. There are a lot of tools, but she seems to have a good handle on which she has, which she needs, and why. Will share more when it is not so late.  

black-nosed sheep

 

Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web-8

 

Thousands of sheep, soft-footed, black-nosed sheep — one by one going up the hill and over the fence — one by one four-footed pattering up and over— one by one wiggling their stub tails as they take the short jump and go over — one by one silently unless for the multitudinous drumming of their hoofs as they move on and go over — thousands and thousands of them in the grey haze of evening just after sundown — one by one slanting in a long line to pass over the hill…

– Carl Sandberg

The meadows of the Ickworth Estate boasted such soft footed, black nosed sheep at every bend in the road.  They never fail to stir up great affection within me. My Gram had a small heard of Suffolk sheep, six I believe.  At least in the beginning. (I inherited her tendency to multiply projects.)  I remember she took a night course at the local extension office. She bought the sheep, bred them. Soon there were twenty, then fifty.  I think there were several dozen by the time my grandfather was overwhelmed and the sheep project came to a close.  

We learned a lot in the interim however. All those biblical analogies take on new meaning after watching a sheep's unique response to challenges (to give up, by and large), towards pack mentality, and the tendency to flee.  Yet, we loved them she and I. In later years she framed a watercolor of a young woman in a nightgown with a winter coat tending a needy sheep in a snowy pen because it reminded her of those late night emergencies that would so often crop up.  

In the late 70's, while we chased those sheep through hill and dale, I certainly never expected to see a herd while standing in Suffolk itself. It is a singular blessing. I know it would make her smile. 

 

Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web-7

Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web-2


Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web

 

Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web-6

and yes this sky is from the same hike.  It was a brief clearing!

Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web-4


Feb 2013 ickworth sheep web-10

hugs and kisses

 

It's love week here.  : ) 

Are you doing silly happy things for Valentine's too? 

Feb 2013 kisses web

These are a sugar cookie base, versus a peanut butter dough, mixed up by Moira with a kiss plunked down on each by a very happy four year old.   Someday some of them will arrive in America for their brothers.  I was not kidding when I said my boxes run late….

And now, I am off to get back to my Grammy's.  Delayed broadcast and all, but awesome. 

Much love - 

and kisses