Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Sonlight Core H Week 3(A) Nov. 14-21, 2016

Sonlight Core H 
Week 3(A) 
Nov. 14-21, 2016
(Sat. Indiana Gun Season/Deer Hunting began)
The snow actually stuck---it snowed most of Saturday, but the accumulation didn't amount to much for all that effort.


Hello Friends! 
 The big excitement was that Dh and Dd went to Indiana, just the two of them, for the opening of deer hunting season.  Dh alternated between hunting with his long-time hunting partner and Dd.  While with his friend, he shot a very large buck---boy, weren't they surprised to find he had 6 points on side of the antler, and the other side was missing...? He would have been a 12 point buck (big/older) if both sides were still there.  We have no idea what happened to the other side!




Giz (Dh's mother, Dd decided grandma should be called "Giz" sometime around her 2nd birthday and it stuck!), decided she and Dd would work on quilting blankets with their time together. 

The blanket/quilt Dd and Giz have been working on.


 Dd had bought a pretty white cotton, thick, table cloth with large red roses on it, and they added batting and a green fleece back and made it into a quilt.  I think they had fun.  Dd is making another one with the extra green and batting left over.

Gingerbread cookie making also filled in their time together.  Dd also played her alto sax, tenor sax, flute, and piano at Giz and Grampy's house.  Dd also played piano with two little relatives that Giz had scheduled to babysit while Dd was there.  I guess it was quite a cute sight--Dd with each little girl on each side of her at the piano bench!!!  Dd had older cousins that were not very interested in her when she was little, at family functions, so she is being extra, extra loving and kind towards these children, as she knows how that can impact.  I'm so glad that she can take those hardships and turn them into being a better person, instead of just repeating the bad behavior.

Synopsis of our week:
Dh and Dd had left for the farm on Fri., so Monday and Tuesday she spent time there - learning a lot from Giz and having fun too.  Tuesday night they returned back to Michigan!  Dd had got sick on Tuesday morning, vomiting by evening...of course! so she came home 'under the weather.'  

While collecting marigold blooms/seeds, I found a small clutch of eggs--seven EGGS were under this marigold!


Monday and Tuesday, while Dd & Dh were in Indiana, I unpacked many of our boxes, finished all the filing (3 file boxes hadn't been opened for almost three years!), gathered LOTS of marigold blooms and spread them out on three cookie sheets to dry-out, and got a lot of our banking and accounts up to date...boring stuff that I had been putting off for far too long!

I harvested another three cookie sheets of large marigolds, some for me, and some for friends.


Tuesday morning I walked down to get on our computer in the basement and noticed our kitty, Agnes, shuffling about--acting erratic.  I went in the utility room to see what was up, and some hose had broke and water was spewing all over the floor! Gasp! Panic! cell phone...calls...prayer...and finally Grampy came to the rescue and told me which thing to turn off!  You'd think I would know which was the main, but I'm too new in this house!  What a shock!  I'm so glad I stayed home, and was able to catch the problem before our basement got flooded!



Wednesday: Dd was able to go to her band classes, and her private piano lesson.  She took a nap when we got home, and made it back out for our church program, Olympians.  When we got home, we had the best surprise....a wonderful new snowblower!  Seriously, I can't count how many hours I shoveled our 200-300 yard drive-way; which almost seems like a mini-road!  This is going to make a huge difference on the amount of time I'm going to have to spend shoveling snow this winter!!!  You can't imagine what a HUGE relief this is!!!  Praise the Lord!

Dd put up a rain gauge that G&G had given her months ago---after she got it all in I had to tell her she couldn't leave the plastic tube outside b/c it would freeze!  She was happy she got the hardware installed, even if she has to wait until spring to see it in action!


Thursday: Back to some lessons, and Dd continued to recover (sleep) from her big excursions! I got to experience the wonders of the "stress test" and be told that I did better 'than most people half my age,' which I fist thought was a compliment, but then realized the nurses were calling me OLD!  It was very quick and mostly easy, though I hadn't planned on running on an incline---I had thought it was just running on a treadmill.  Glad I got it done, and hope the info might be helpful.



Friday: This was the LAST of our Indian Summer, so I worked like, as my Dh would say, "a borrowed mule!"  Seriously!  I worked outside the whole day...leaving our house to continue to be a mess!  

While weeding, I came across these potatoes!  I had forgotten that I stuck in an old potato in the spring!!


Dh bought three big bags of daffodil bulbs that needed to be planted.  Dd and I had a lot of fun choosing our spots, digging and weeding, and then planting our bulbs. 

Sophie happy to watch us work!


 I re-did our front two gardens, making them bigger to accommodate the bulbs. 

The chickens had a BLAST "helping" me plant the new bulbs!  They scored so many worms, it was crazy!  I put up the rock border as well.


 I added a big rock border to the garden beside the front door---which sounds quick and easy, but took about five - six hours to do!  I am fairly close to wrapping up the outside chores that have to be done before winter....which is a good thing because it SNOWED all day Saturday!  Winter has arrived in Michigan, folks! 

The garden that Dd worked on--Friday




Saturday:
Dh finished up the molding on the new patio doors!!!

These doors are so much better than the last set!

Chickens:

They got a new feeder this week! It is the metal one that is hanging down against the dark blue wall.  They are needing the heat lamp already.

Here is the insulation that I built up above their coop:

A shot from the stairwell going down into the lower part of the building---below you can see the wall of the chicken coop and above you can see the floor where I stacked up insulation that is just above them.  They have around 3 feet of insulation above them.



Academics for the week: 

Bible:
I've been having Dd choose a bible verse each week and write it down, in cursive, in her special book.

Veritas Press: Gospels: Student Notebook: Completed

The BBC Manuel: (Sonlight's bible program):
pg's 24-26, 26-29, 36-38

But Don't All Religions Lead to God?
Ch. 5 & 6

Dd went to church and Sunday School with her grandparents this week, in Indiana.



History:
Story of the World: Early Modern Times
Ch. 3-5

Sonlight Reader:
The Iron Peacock by Mary Stetson Clarke: Completed
Amazon review: Joanna Sprague's life is upended when her father dies on the voyage that was to take them to a new life in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Poor and alone, 16-year-old Joanna must summon uncommon courage to survive life as a bond servant in a strange new world. An unforgettable, captivating story.
Great for ages 12 - 14.

Khan Academy: Math: 2 hours this week

Poetry:

Painless Poetry:
pg's 249-259, 270-271, 272-293



Language Arts:
IEW SWI B: Lesson 11: in process




Physical Education/PE:

Hunting with Pappa: 4-5 hours
Gardening, planting bulbs...etc.: 6 hours
Leaf blowing: 1:30 hours
Chicken Care: 1:00 hour


Home Economics:
Laundry and cat care: 1:30 hours
Angel Food Cake and Icing: 1:45 hours
Chicken Parmesan: 1:00 hour

Brenda Lee says hello!

Audio 1:
The Miraculous Tales of Edward Tulane by Kate DiCamillo: Completed
Amazon review: Once, in a house on Egypt Street, there lived a china rabbit named Edward Tulane. The rabbit was very pleased with himself, and for good reason: he was owned by a girl named Abilene, who adored him completely. And then, one day, he was lost. . . . 

Kate DiCamillo takes us on an extraordinary journey, from the depths of the ocean to the net of a fisherman, from the bedside of an ailing child to the bustling streets of Memphis. Along the way, we are shown a miracle -- that even a heart of the most breakable kind can learn to love, to lose, and to love again.


Audio: 2:
Guardians of Ga'Hoole, #7: The Hatchling by Kathryn Lasky:
 In process




Fun Books:
The Swap : Completed
My Life withe the Walter Boys: Completed
Dune: sipping off and on
Spirit's Princess: In Process

Art: 
Drawing: 1 hour



Music: total 12:35 hours
Piano: 3:00 hours
Alto Sax: 3:15 hours
Tenor Sax: 2:30 hours
Flute: 20 minutes
Beginning Band (Tenor): 1:30 hours
Intermediate Band (Alto): 1:30 hours
Piano lesson: 30 minutes


Our first sticking snow!

Looking forward to next week--and a time to be overly Thankful for all of our blessings!!!  May each of you count each blessing and find an abundance!


............

Monday, November 14, 2016

Sonlight Core H Week 2C November 7-12, 2016

Sonlight Core H 
Week 2 "C" 
November 7-12, 2016

Our chickens: 1 cockerel Buff Orpington, 4 hen Buff Orpingtons, 10 Black Star/Black Sex Links.


Hello Friends! 
Another good week of homeschooling, enjoying nature, growing closer to the Lord, and reading good books!


When I open the ramp each morning, the chickens are in a massive panic to see how fast they can get out! It is really fun to watch this mad dash for the exit!

This was more of an academic week for us, at least it started out that way!  Dh and Dd left on Friday for our old farm in southern Indiana.  
The single greatest delight this week was my bird feeders, the sunflower seeds brought all the various bird species back to my yard.  I didn't realize just how much I was missing my feathered friends!  Fairly inexpensive therapy...  This is a Downy Woodpecker on my feeder.

Hunting Season:
Opening Day for gun season started on Saturday morning.  I decided to stay home alone for the first excursion and catch up on billing, filling, and unpacking.  We still have so many boxes still to unpack, and it is amazing how true the old saying, "out of sight, out of mind" is really true.  I've unpacked things I've had my whole life and hadn't thought of them once since I packed them, almost three years ago!  Hunting has gone well for Dh and his hunting buddy; they both were successful.  Dh got a 12 point large buck that looks like it should feed us for a long time!  Dd has reading, IEW writing, and music assignments while there.

Dh has seen 4-5 BOBCATS on our property this visit!  How unusual!  They have seen them each time out.  Apparently the bobcats are there to stay and have a home set up close.


Male Downy Woodpecker (see his red head?)


Unpacking Boxes...still!
I've gotten quite a few boxes unpacked over the weekend, and got our boxes of files actually unpacked and pack in the file cabinets! We've been here for a year and four months, and still have so much to do!  I'm glad to make progress with our boxes this week, though I am missing Dh and Dd.  Sophie, Agnes, and the chickens have kept me company during their trip.  The other major accomplishment is that I have been hanging up photo's and things on our walls!  It has started to look like 'my' home now, with way too much clutter!  My nest is coming together!
Red-Bellied Woodpecker in the feeder that Dh and Dd made for me, for Christmas, 3 years ago.


Quilt:
Giz bought batting and fabric to go along with some lovely material Dd found at a yard sale and they are working on making a quilt this weekend, and part of next week.  The fabric Dd found reminds us both of our friend, Heather L., and can't wait to show her how it turns out.  I'm glad Giz and Dd are having a fun project to work on together during this trip.

The female Buff Orpington's are always the last out of the coop each morning.


Chicken Coop:
After Giz and Grampy left on Monday, Dd needed the morning to get over her sadness, so I worked on adding insulation to the top of the chicken coop.  Luckily we had a lot of left over insulation, both the strayfoam boards and the pink 'proper' insulation.  I spent a few hours and got all of it above the coop; and hope the effort will help the chickens stay toasty this winter. 




 It is humorous to even myself, that although I have finished the chicken extension, I am still letting the chickens free range while the pickings are still good.  Soon they will be locked in their little coop and wishing for long walks foraging.


Blue Jay


Our lessons this week:

Bible: (6 hours)
Veritas Press: Gospels: COMPLETED!
Card 125:
Card 126:
Card 127: The Great Commission, Matt 28: 18-20  (read with Bible and Believer's Bible Commentary)
Card 128: The Ascension: Luke 24: 50-53 and Acts 1:9-11 (read with Bible and Believer's Bible Commentary)

Journey Through the Bible
pg 342-343

Survey of the Bible:
pg 173

Dd had all the student notebook pages to finish up for all the cards, and having completed that, we have completed this bible study.  After doing Veritas Press' Bible for, probably three years now, we are going to move on to something else.  We will do the Sonlight Bible assignments, and I'm reading some Bob Jones high school bible books I bought used.  I'll keep you posted as to what we do next.  

Church and Sunday School with Giz and Grampy in Indiana (I decided to stay home this week from our home church, and wait until the political discussions are mostly over, as I can't take any more politics!!!!)
(2 hours)


History: (2 hours)

Mystery of History: Vol. 3: audio
we started this audio over again, and re-listened to what we had heard to make sure we got it down right.
Lesson 1: The Wars of the Roses (1455-1522)
Lesson 2: Cosimo de' Medici and the Rise of the Italian Renaissance (1464)
Lesson 3: Ferdinand, Isabella, and the Spanish Inquisition (1469)
Lesson 4: Ivan the Great (1480)
Lesson 5: Dias and da Gama Round the Cape of Good Hope (1487, 1497)
Lesson 6: Lorenzo the Magnificent (1492)
Lesson 7: Christopher Columbus Sails to an "Other World" (1492)
Lesson 8: The Return of Cristobal Colon (1493-1502)

Sonlight Reader: (4:00 hours)
The Iron Peacock by Mary Stetson Clarke: Completed
Sonlight's summary:
Joanna Sprague's life is upended when her father dies on the voyage that was to take them to a new life in the Massachusetts Bay Colony (1628–1691) . Poor and alone, 16-year-old Joanna must summon uncommon courage to survive life as a bond servant in a strange new world. An unforgettable, captivating story.

Great for ages 12 - 14.


My Add-In Read Aloud: (history RA's: 15 hours)
The Hawk That Dare Not Hunt By Day by Scott O'Dell: in process, 3 chapters left!
Amid political turmoil and threats of plague, young Tom Barton accepts the risks of helping William Tyndale publish and smuggle into England the Bible he has translated into English.
William Tyndale,1492- 1536, 
This story tells the story of William Tyndale, who was an English scholar who became a leading figure in Protestant reform in the years leading up to his execution. He is well known for his translation of the Bible into English.


(Read Aloud) BiblioPlan Companion:
Chapter 28: The Renaissance In Art: completed
good chapter!!!
Tufted Titmouse 

  

Math: 3 hours
Khan Academy
This is a Red-Breasted Nuthatch.  We more commonly see the White-Breasted Nuthatch, so seeing these birds has been a treat; and there sure has been a lot of them.


Foreign Language: 
DuoLingo: German: 30 minutes
Dd drew this week


Science: 
Apologia: Physical Science: (2 hours)
Module 2: Air: In Process
Dd drew this week


Language Arts:

Latin: Word Roots:
pg's 44-49

Sonlight Language Arts pages: "Week 1" and "Week 2"

IEW: SWI B:
Module 11: completed

Poetry:
Painless Poetry: pg's 41-49
Dd drew this week


Music:
Beginning Band Class: 1:30 hours
Intermediate Band Class: 1:30 hours
Private Piano Lesson: 30 minutes
Violin: 10 minutes
Alto Sax: 1:30 hours
Tenor Sax: 1:00
Piano: 1:45 hours
Flute: 1:25 hours

Dd made this week


Busy Hands:
Balsa Wood "Classic Car" kit: completed
Drawing : BIG drawing week: 8 hours total
Quilting with Giz: Sat & Sun: 3 hours


I'll have to add the audio's and fun books she read this week when she gets back from her trip....

...........

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Sonlight Core H Week 2B Oct. 31st-Nov.6th, 2016 (not an academic week)

Sonlight Core H
Week 2 B--Though NOT an academic week!
Oct. 31st-Nov. 6th, 2016


Zeus, taking command of his new territory!  This week I finished the last (and third) extension for the chicken run.  They are still finding a way to get out--flying? So, it isn't perfect, but we're getting closer.



Hello Friends!
Happy Halloween! Or, as I like to think of it, Happy Candy Day!  A friend from church invited Dd and I to ride along with her, and her daughter, to visit church friends for our treats.  We had a really lovely time getting to see where our church friends lived and getting to chat with them throughout the evening.  We have eaten so much candy and sugar this week!  Giz and Grampy were here this week!



I made gluten free brownies, Giz brought  two pumpkin pies, and Dd made a cheesecake---on top of the Halloween candy!  Giz and Grampy arrived on Wednesday, and our adventures began!  They brought along their tools and were set to help us put in the new patio doors. 



They also had their hearts set on putting up two towel racks, and a hook in the new blue bathroom in the basement.  Sure enough, they got that done.  They had hoped to get up a new shower curtain rod, but either they ran out of time or something, so we still have the crummy plastic one for now.  Grampy said our bathroom doesn’t have any studs, so putting up anything proves difficult!  He had to use wing-nut hardware to make things a bit sturdy.


Giz taught me how to make her Curry Chicken Salad dish—not so hard after all!  Then she showed Dd how to make her Blueberry Cheesecake.

Sophie:


With Sophie’s cancer diagnosis I am trying to spoil her a little more than usual, and appreciate special time with her each day.  Processing the bad news is difficult, but I keep praying for her and asking for God to bless her and help her. 



Chicken Coop:
I’m SO happy to share that I finished the fencing for the extension on the chicken run!!!! 


This picture shows the gates without fencing, by the end of the week, the whole enclosure was wrapped in fencing. 


While Dh and Grampy worked on the patio doors, I worked (with some help from Giz) on the extension. Giz came over a few times to hold the fence up while I tacked it in.  It was nice to have her help.


This is what the back side of the run looks like now.  There is a back gate in run #2 that opens up into this long back run.  You can just make out the gate on the right side of the photo, inside the run.

 I’m so happy to be able to keep the chickens in the extension and have a break from chicken poop on my driveway and deck! 



 This will be a nice compromise, as I can let them out to free-range whenever I choose to, but can also keep them in the huge run and not feel guilty, as the extension is very big!  Yay!  


This is the 'side' of the new extension--the fencing wraps around two sides of our outbuilding. What a job this has been---taking up most of our summer and fall.


Done, for now!



Giz, Dd, and I went and bought 9 bales of straw for the winter.  I piled it up on one side of the outside of the chicken coop to double (or triple) insulate.  Don't ask about the silly grocery cart, that was here when we bought this place!

Shopping:
We took Giz on a big shopping spree—Thursday we went to Flat River Outreach Ministries (a well-stocked, church based thrift store) where we all found some awesome buys!  I actually found a pair of Levi jeans, that FIT!, for $2.00!! We had never been there before, but will definitely be going there again!!!  Friday we showed Giz our local Goodwill, and found some more things.  I found a great belt (for my new jeans) for $1.99!  It has been a long time since I found a pair of jeans that fit right—not too tight, not too loose that I have pleats! I found Giz an OXO salad spinner for $4.00!  I had just paid $30.00 for mine last month.


Girl’s Night: Harvest Party



Friday night was the V’s family “Harvest Party” that Dd and I attended.  


We enjoyed a long hay ride, pulled with a tractor.  



The girls played a lot of games together, and ate lots of sugary treats.  We moms had a chance to visit together, and talk about chickens!  

Ugly Election:
We had managed to keep the presidential election out of sight and out of mind for most of the week, as we don’t have tv, and a radio station started Christmas carols on Nov. 1st.  Then we went to church---and there at church we were beat over the head about politics! Yikes!!!!  They had a flier in the bulletin that was comparing the two candidates, and then as if that wasn’t bad enough our Sunday School class was FULL of ugly comments.  To be honest, I’m still trying to get over it.  I can’t say that in any of the churches I’ve ever gone to that there was this kind of political talk.  Giz was also quite surprised and not impressed with it; which I was happy to have her sharing my disbelief.  


I've added some fall leaves to their new straw--some added excitement.

Break from our books for Grandparents:
With Giz and Grampy here this week, we took a break from our normal routine and enjoyed the special time with them.  They missed most of the beautiful colored foliage, but there was still a trace of the highlights.  Indiana seems to have been too dry this fall and didn’t have much color at all in their trees.  I appreciate how with homeschooling we can take time off our lessons and get to enjoy family time when the opportunity arises.  The whole month of November will be hit and miss with hunting season beginning, and a trip or two to Indiana being on our schedule.  But, I’m sure she will make up the time, if we haven’t already.


Skip Bo, UNO, and Pit:
We had a blast most evenings playing card games with Giz and Grampy!!!  So much fun!  It is good to have fun and laugh all together.

Bird Feeder:
I found time to put up my kitchen window bird feeder, and have been very much appreciating the return of the birds.  I have been just so busy that the feeders kept falling off the bottom of my to-do list. 

Our Lessons this Week:

Music: 
Big Piano Week!  Dd’s music teacher assigned a Christmas piano book, and Dd played that book all week!  Her mouth was sore from sax so much playing in the beginning of this week, so she spent most of the week playing on the piano; which Giz really complimented. I have to say, hearing Dd play the Christmas music was my most favorite thing of the week. Giz also said she liked hearing Dd play the piano most of all. It is so nice thinking of Christmas coming soon.  I’m ever so tired of all the work that has taken place in these warm months and am ready for a slower pace.

Flute: 30 minutes
Guitar: 0
Alto Sax: 3:30 minutes
Tenor Sax: 1:30 hours
Piano: 5:00 hours
Beginning Band: 1:30
Intermediate Band: 1:30
Private Piano Lesson: 30 minutes

Sonlight Reader: The Iron Peacock by Mary Stetson Clarke (in process)


Fun Books:
The Swap by Megan Shull: Completed
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austin : In Process
Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton
Darcy’s Undoing by Abigal Reynolds



Busy Hands:



Started bonfire
Made baked beans and weenie’s dish, cooked over the fire
Grilled hot dogs and S’mores
Bathroom towel rod & hook installation with Grampy: 1:30 hours
Chicken Care, Egg collection: 2:30 hours

Physical Education:
Skateboarding: 2 hours



Leaf Blower- 1:30 hours of yard work
Patio Door installation: 2 hours
Hockey: 15 minutes

Church and Sunday School: 2:00 hours

New Devotional: Made To Shine by The Sonflowerz: 2:00 hours.  She did her own bible study this week, by herself.  I did my bible study with Giz and Grampy and their The Secret Place devotional.

Patio Door Summary:


Grampy and Dh went and picked up the kit, the frame, two doors, and screen door. Then they put the frame together.


Then they hammered around the perimeter of the old door frame to get it disconnected from the wall.




Then they removed one door, then the second door.




We were hoping the wood under the door would be good, but it wasn't.  They had to go back to the store and buy all new wood to replace the header and sides.




Doors out!


They only had one board for a header...we will replace it and put in two boards for extra support.
Here you can see the damage we had to work with

All new wood



Two new headers--these boards were a foot wide!  Big, wide, sturdy replacements.



Fast forward, here the new wood had been bought, measured, and put in.  Now to make sure everything is plumb level...which it was, of course, because Grampy is here!  Can you guess how old Grampy is???  82 years old!  




I think we used at least 7 caulk tubes, and we still aren't done with caulking!


Before




After!

We still have the trim and molding to do, but the new door is in! Praise the Lord!  And, Agnes approves of the quality of work done!  This Anderson patio door is top-notch and great improvement over that last door!

..............