Monday, December 27, 2010

Nine years and couting!


We celebrated nine years of marriage last week on our trip. So thankful for Gappy watching the little boys so we could go out to the Hard Rock Cafe. Will not talk about the rain storm we got caught in that totally drenched us... one of those things that someday we'll look back on and laugh about... someday. :)

I love you, Babe, and am so thankful for nine years together.

Our trip

We got back 4 days ago from our vacation. We had a great time. I am so, so thankful to the Lord for a break and for a good time as a family. It's been hard to go from vacation to "normal life" again. Especially when vacation meant nice stores to shop at, cooler temperatures and showers with hot water... and "normal life" means cooking from scratch and cold bucket showers and constant battles for control of my kitchen against millions of bugs and geckos....

Will take a while to get all the pictures up, but here are a few to start....

Our first five nights we stayed at a small hotel right by the beach on the eastern side of the island. We basically just stayed at the hotel and swam and vegged. We had a "garden suite" which meant we had a walled courtyard with a lounging bed outside; a kitchen - that also was completely open to the outside and an open air bathroom... I didn't get pictures of it, but had white rocks with a huge rock bathtub - very modern and zen like - with a pond right behind it. Our bedroom was totally closed in (with AC!) and the boys did great all being in the same room. It was nice to have the courtyard and kitchen so Brant and I could hang out when the boys were sleeping.

We figured out really quickly it was easier to order room service (way cheap!) than leave the hotel to eat. Also, I went to a local grocery store and got lots of fun Western types food (like cheese and strawberries and spaghetti sauce in a jar!) and cooked some. Way easier on the boys than going to a fancy restaurant.


The hotel had great breakfasts and then we spent most mornings in the pool; which was cool with two levels (the upper level being really shallow with fun fountains and then flowing into the deeper part.)



We did venture out to do some shopping - which was fun for me but stressful with the little boys. We made up for it with treats.... like Cold Stone!!!!!!!!

One evening, we went to visit our good friends, who were also on vacation and staying at a hotel nearby. They had the coolest waterslide at their hotel. The boys - even Ezra - went down it multiple times with Brant.

The beach was pretty crummy right by our hotel, so we walked up the beach walk to a really fancy resort on the beach and spent the day there. Was a plus knowing the language as Brant could talk to the manager and get special permission. :) They had really cool pagoda type things that we hung out in and the boys loved playing in the sand.


On our way back to our hotel we saw a dead whale washed up on shore. Was kinda gross but cool for the boys to see how big they are. (Brant said he thought it was a baby sperm whale???)

Saturday, December 11, 2010

One more

Ezra is a doll. Today he was helping Brant wash the car (to get it ready for Gappy coming!) and he really wanted to help with the hose, so Brant gave him a piece of hose - not connected to anything. He was perfectly happy to "fill" the bucket and carry his hose piece around. :)

I tried to get him to hold the hose for the picture... this is what he did. :)

Christmas fun

It has been two weeks since our brown eyed boy turned four, and we STILL don't have pictures. I am sorry... I was so prepped and ready for his little party - I took my camera and got to the party and realized my camera batteries had totally died. But Brant showed up with his brand new nifty phone with a camera and took pictures... which a month later, are still stuck on the phone/camera and we have no idea how to get them off! :(

So my boys love hats, and the popular hat of the season is you guessed it....



One fun thing we have done this season that might become a tradition in our family is doing a "thank you box." A week or two before Thanksgiving I was wanting to do something with the boys to help them realize how much they have to be thankful for. As I was thinking and praying about it, I realized I wanted them to be more than just "thankful" - we wanted them to realize that all the good things in their lives - whether packages from friends or fun treats for snack or new library books - are all gifts from God. Caleb had just learned James 1:17 in his Cubbies book and so we wrapped a gift box and each night we all say a "gift" God has given us that we are thankful for. Brant writes them down and the boys fold them up and put them in the box.It's easy to carry over into Christmas as gifts are very much on the mind. Here's a picture of our little box... it's a bit well-loved. :) But it's been really fun to see them think of things they are thankful for and to see them learning to thank God for all His "gifts."

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Report Card

This week we are wrapping up our first semester home schooling. I am not planning on giving my 6 year old a report card by any stretch of the imagination; but I did think I would take a moment to evaluate how the semester went....

I was a bit nervous schooling Elijah - he's very strong-willed and stubborn; but he loves to learn (notice I did not say he loves to do his schoolwork!) Overall I would say it went way better than I thought it would. :)

We start each day with math.... mostly because the math curriculum we are using (Saxon 1) is totally manipulatives based and so the little boys can play with the manipulatives while I teach Elijah his lesson. I love the curriculum... he is learning a ton almost effortlessly and the manipulatives are great - they change each day, so it really works to keep the little boys occupied and gives Elijah something new to "play" with each day.

My one complaint with Saxon is the worksheets are a bit much.... he has to do 3-4 a day most days. Granted, he's doing the first grade program in kinder (the real kinder program is entirely manipulatives based with no writing whatsoever; I thought that was a bit too easy) So I've made him just do one worksheet a day and occasionally throw in an extra. He still seems to be getting the concepts well enough. His issue is it just takes him SO long to complete one little worksheet - he's so easily distracted. "Hey Mom, look at how I drew the dot on the 'i' in my name. It looks like a snowball. Hey, next time we go to America can we play in the snow? How come it doesn't snow here?" and so on and so on and so on.....

I don't have any pictures of his language arts curriculum, but we're doing Sing, Spell, Read, and Write. I really like it - very basic, easy; again, almost effortless to teach. There's lots of coloring and cutting and gluing each lesson, so Elijah likes that. He finished all the alphabet letters, which was a bit of a review for him; and then just finished the semester with learned CVC words for all the short vowels - so he can read about 50-100 little words. When I told him the other day he was doing such a great job reading, his response was "Mom, the words I read are just 3 letters and really easy. I can't read big kid words yet."

Elijah does his reading worksheets in the afternoon when the little boys are napping. Then I read with him from a chapter book - we're working through the Sonlight curriculum's "Read Aloud" book list for kinder. He LOVES it; definitely the best part of the day. We've read several really fun books, including 3 Boxcar Children books, a fun one called "My Father's Dragon" and are currently reading "The Best Christmas Pageant Ever" :)

For social studies and science, we met with another family here in town who has two little boys Elijah and Caleb's ages. I taught social studies once a week; my friend Rachel taught science on the opposing weeks. We used Sonlight's K social studies program and the boys LOVED it. We covered ancient world history - a bit heavy sounding for kindergarten, but the books were great and each week we did a project covering the people we were studying; most of our lessons revolved around weapons and ships and warfare... you could say it was an "Intro to World Cultures for Little Boys Interested in Fighting" :)

Here the boys are wearing their Egyptian collars and eating their snack from a reed basket.

For Roman day we baked "Roman Bread Pudding" and ate laying down on pillows.

Rachel did a lesson on magnets and we got a Magic School Bus book on electricity, so Brant and the boys spent one evening making electrical experiments, which they thought was so cool.

Then we went and saw baby chicks.... the ex-pat doctor here in town is doing a chicken/egg social development project and had dozens of baby chicks in incubators in her living room. :) We were hoping to see them hatch out of their eggs, but it takes hours for one little chick to poke his way out of an egg.... not exactly a thriller for the little boys. :) They loved holding the baby chicks, especially Ezra.

Our other "class" we're doing is the national language class... I set up that all four little boys (mine and Rachel's) go to the big MK school once a week to learn language with the elementary foreign language teacher. The teacher is a young guy just out of college and he's really good... he definitely has his hands full with our four active little boys, but the boys are learning quite a bit - family terms, foods, animals, colors and numbers. It's fun to see them getting more comfortable using the language.

Final pic - at the MK school here in town, one of the high school classes put on a "costume ball" for the elementary classes back in November. They invited all the elementary aged kids - not just students at the school, so Elijah was THRILLED he was able to go..... He was a pirate - he and Brant worked together all morning before the party to make his sword - and he did not whack anyone with it at the party. :) It was his first "big kid" party, and I was a bit nervous how he would do just being dropped off, but he did great and loved it... they broke the kids up into groups by grade and Elijah knows all the other kindergartners, so he had a ton of fun. Plus, some of my students were his group leaders, so I told them to keep an eye for Elijah or they wouldn't pass my class. :) They played games in the gym then went to the MPR and watch short cartoons and had snacks. He had a blast. Caleb was so disappointed he wasn't allowed to go, but we explained that it was a privilege Elijah got for working so hard on his worksheets everyday and doing such a good job on school.

So, overall, was a great first semester. The other day Elijah turned to me while we were reading and said "Mom, I love school."

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Spinach stromboli



So going to post a recipe. I made this the other night; got the recipe out of Real Simple, which the I think is the best magazine ever. The boys gobbled it down; then they asked for leftovers the next day at lunch (there were none). Then they asked me to cook it for dinner the next night.

The best part is that it's really healthy and you can get copious amounts of spinach down even the pickiest eater.... it's also really fast and easy, which is a must in the land of no dishwashers and baking everything from scratch.

What you need....
- Pizza dough.... I make my own because the nearest TJ's is 12,000 miles away. You can use frozen dough that is thawed or buy fresh that comes in one pound bags.
- Sliced lunch meat.... I think the magazine calls for salami. We use ham slices - really yum. Any kind of sliced meat would work, I think. I used only 4 big slices per Stromboli, but sliced lunch meat is very hard to get here and very expensive.
- Spinach.... raw, a whole bunch (maybe a bag in the land of bagged, washed spinach?)
- Cheese.... I used grated cheddar because that's all I had. I think the recipe called for something more fancy like provolone or swiss. The cheddar was yummy.

What you do....
Roll out the pizza dough til it's big and rectangular like if you were going to make a big pizza in a cookie sheet. I always use whole wheat dough. :)
Lay the ham directly on top of the dough - no sauce, no nothing. Again, I just laid 4 pieces down the middle (length wise, so there would be some in every cut slice) but you could easily cover the whole dough with meat.
Then put the spinach on top of the meat.... you don't need to cut it or anything, but it does need to be dry if you washed it. I used probably 5-6 big handfuls and covered the whole surface of the dough. It will be really high and fluffy, but will cook down to nothing.
Layer the cheese on top - how much ever you want to use. I liked the grated cheese because it fell into the spinach nicely.
Then you roll the dough so you have a nice long, fat dough log with layers of meat, cheese and spinach.
I brushed mine with olive oil and sprinkled the top with Parmesan cheese (the kind in the green bottle) and corn meal... adds a yummy touch. :)
It needs to be placed on a greased cookie sheet.... we ate two whole ones; I placed them side by side on the same cookie sheet.
Cook for 25 minutes-ish at 350 til the crust is hard and golden-ish (mine didn't get real golden).

Then just cut in slices. I served it with sweet potato fries and the treasured pomegranate, so we had a really healthy, colorful dinner. :)