Wednesday, December 29, 2010

A Merry Christmas to You All


We've been having a lovely Christmas this year. We've had good times with family, with friends, with our church, and here is a picture from the Waterloo family gathering. Hope you all have been enjoying a break from the normal routines, and have had some meaningful reflections on the birth of Christ, our Saviour.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Jubal Class Photos

We had our Christmas concert for Jubal Cottage School last week. Jubal is a local homeschooling group focusing on the arts, and I direct the Junior and Senior choirs. All of our children are involved this year. Before the concert we stood the children up on the platform and took some "class photos" - here they are!


The Jubal student body is in this picture as the combined choir.



Junior Drama



Senior Drama


Senior Bell Choir



Senior Choir



Junior 1 Bell Choir



Junior 2 Bell Choir



Junior Choir

Our concert went very well! We had a lot of fun, and are already looking forward to the next semester!

Saturday, December 11, 2010

In Which We Hunt the Christmas Tree


We like to cut our own locally grown Christmas tree from a Christmas tree farm. This year I came along, which was the first time for several years. David said it was easier when there weren't six people giving their opinions on which tree would be best! However, we did find a tree, and have a good time.


Off to the hunt!


This tree still has a few years to grow!


We like this one!

Daddy gets cutting!
Timber!


Carrying the tree back to the van.


David has loaded up plenty of canoes on top, so a tree is no big deal!


The tree gets tied down for its ride home!
Maybe I'll get some pictures up soon of how the tree looks indoors and decorated!

Friday, December 3, 2010

Tyger, Tyger, burning bright...



Emmi was invited to a dress-up birthday party this fall. She chose to be a tiger! Daddy had the brilliant idea of using electrical tape on her orange clothes, to give her stripes. I bought the first eyeliner I have purchased since high school, to give her a nose and whiskers. I also bought an orange t-shirt at Goodwill, and Emmi used the serger to make a tail. We had some ears on a hair band from another costume, and she was ready to skulk in the shadows of the jungle.



Don't be frightened! This tiger can be quite friendly too!

Monday, October 25, 2010

New Mayor for Thorold!

David and I have been hanging on to the election results all evening - radio and Internet. I am pretty interested in the Toronto race with a lot of family and friends in that city. But the race that interests me the most is here in Thorold! Our mayor decided not to run again in this election, so like Toronto, we had a pretty interesting race. However, we are hearing that the guy who, out of the three candidates, was pegged as "not a front runner" has won, by 4 votes! Wow!! We'll have to see if he survives a recount! Exciting times for a little city!!

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Quill Pens



We are continuing our study of history - this year focusing on the Middle Ages. One of our recent projects was to make, and use, quill pens. We did this after reading about monasteries and scriptoriums, and one of our books had detailed steps for curing parchment (from animal hides), making quill pens and mixing inks. We skipped the hides (using the more recent invention of paper from trees) and ink (using an old refill for the ink-jet printer!) but tried cutting some quill pens from geese feathers collected in the summer.



One story we read of an apprentice boy in a scriptorium commented that he had spent months learning how to cut the quills, and then more months learning how to use them to make the letters. (This was after he had a mastery of Latin!) So I wasn't too surprised at the mess we made writing, or the difficulty the children had in using the pens. It took a fair bit of concentration to reproduce the alphabet the monks would have used.


Even so, we had an enjoyable time, and returned to the modern world of ball-points, fountain pens and pencils with an appreciation for the monks and others who preserved so many texts in such a labourious way.


Thursday, October 14, 2010

Canoeing



Well it seems that September and early October have been pretty busy around here! One big highlight of the past few weeks was a 6 day canoe trip we took in September.

We went to a new (for us) lake system, just off the Pickerel River, between Sudbury and Parry Sound. We had a mix of weather, some great so we could go swimming:



And some really rainy!



We also had the usual fun time hanging out together, and occasionally being a bit goofy.



David and I always appreciate the time away as a family. We see less bickering and arguing the longer we are away - the fact that David was giving us daily readings from Ephesians with appropriate comments helped too! All the children worked very hard - from carrying heavy packs over the portages, to helping set up and take down tents, to dishwashing and filtering water. Of course, it wasn't all work and no play! We had some good times playing, drinking tea with cake (guess who that was!) and reading together.


We worked our way through a gripping read-aloud about convoys in WWII - the children wouldn't let David stop at points!

Our last day was the wettest - with rain that got progressively heavier (and a wind that got stronger, or maybe it was just me feeling tired!) as we got closer and closer to the van. By the time we got there, we were all ready for a dry change of clothes. Once dry, with snacks in our bellies, we had quite a feeling of jubilation at our accomplishments and the fun time we had together.