Tuesday, February 14, 2012

It's Finished!!

This was our living room before. Under a small basket next to the TV was a gas line.

This is what we did with the gas line:

Isn't it beautiful? And toasty. Would you like to know my favorite things about it? Here they are anyway:
1) I LOVE being able to have a warm fire with the flip of a switch
2) I love that the fireplace itself was made in Kentucky and the stone was made in Jackson
3) I LOVE that I can turn on the fire anytime I'm a bit chilled with just the flip of a switch
4) I love that we came in $700 under budget
5) I love that our living room now has a focal point besides animal heads
6) I really, really LOVE that I can have a fire without wood or matches or a mess

We still have a ways to go (like painting the room and purchasing an entertainment center or something) but we are loving having this fireplace. Thank you, Cyle, for all your hard work!!

Happy Valentine's Day


This evening, after our very busy, snowy Valentine's Day, I walk into the boys' room to find them in Levi's bed. I heard Clayton say, "Levi, you're my very best friend of all." It was the best ending to any day.









Today we had our first real snow day of the season and boy, oh boy did we all have a good time! Except for Clarey who didn't really like walking in the snow or sledding in the snow or holding a snow ball or anything to do with the snow. She was only content outside for as long as she was because she liked watching the cats play in the snow. The boys had an absolute blast. Our neighbor and best babysitter in the world, Caitlyn, brought their sleds over and played with us outside all morning. We had to get it all in as quickly as we could because the temperture was rising and the snow was melting. We built snowmen, made snow angels, raced down the hill and played until we could go no more. In the afternoon we made some chocolate heart cookies, heart-shaped rolls and heart-shaped mini-meatloaves that we all enjoyed at supper. I did no cleaning or laundry or dishes and spent the day enjoying my children. I'm paying for that now (and probably will be the rest of the week as I try to catch up) but I so enjoyed our day.

Friday, January 20, 2012

The Importance of Play

"It could be argued that active play is so central to child development that it should be included in the very definition of childhood. Play offers more than cherished memories of growing up, it allows children to develop creativity and imagination while developing physical, cognitive, and emotional strengths...Even in the academic environment, play helps children adjust to the school setting, thereby fostering school engagement, and enhances children’s learning readiness, learning behaviors, and problem-solving skills.1931 In addition, play and recess may increase children’s capacity to store new information, as their cognitive capacity is enhanced when they are offered a drastic change in activity.19,20"

This is from the article:

The Importance of Play in Promoting Healthy Child Development and Maintaining Strong Parent-Child Bond: Focus on Children in Poverty


It's a good read. Check it out!


Erupting Volcanoes


So what have we been up to lately? Besides all the holidays and new year excitment that I promise to post on here soon? Volcanoes. Volcanoes. And more volcanoes.

After finding pictures of a volcano in a book and reading about them night after night, the boys have become very interested in them. I should have known this was coming. There aren't many dinosaur books without a volcano in the background...

The first volcano activity we did was inspired by some crafts I've seen on Pinterest involving crayons and a glue gun. After fashioning a volcano out of paper and a plastic cup, we put red crayons in the hot glue gun to melt our lava.

It was a lot more difficult than I anticipated...though, this could be because we used my oldest, cheapest, worst hot glue gun. I just wasn't willing to sacrifice my good one for this.

As they added the lava, we talked about how the crayons got so hot inside the gun they melted and once on the volcano they cooled, just like magma in the earth and the lava on the surface.


That same day, Clayton "sculpted " (his word, not mine) this volcano out of a small container and playdough. He did this completely on his own with no direction from me other than, "Don't use the good playdough!" Without waiting two seconds we had to take it upstairs to make it erupt.


We did the classic baking soda and vinegar eruption.

The boys loved it. We did it over and over. When telling someone about it, Clayton said, "You know, we used that stuff that you cook with to make the volcano erupt."

We made that volcano erupt until we ran out of baking soda. And then, unbelievably, Clayton let me throw the volcano away.

A couple weeks later, we were back at it and the boys were so excited. I'm surprised they were standing still enough for me to take this picture.





After placing some crayon, sand and water in a heatproof glass container (an old measuring cup without any lines - I knew I was saving this for good reason!) we put it on the stove. As the wax got hot, it erupted through the sand. The best part of this experiment was the sound effects.
When it was over, Clayton said, "I observed that when it started to erupt it made a sound." We heard sounds like a pot of water makes just before it starts to boil that got louder as the wax broke through the sand. Levi said, "The yellow went up!" Though not as dramatic as I would have liked, it was still cool. If I had used regular wax, not a crayon, I think it would have worked much better.





Our last, and final, experiment involved water, yeast and hydrogen peroxide. While a baking soda and vinegart reaction is fast, this reaction is much slower. I'm so glad we used a clear bottle so we could see it building inside. Slowly, slowly it bubbled out of the soda bottle. What was really cool was that this reaction also produced heat. Everyone was able to feel how warm it was. The boys were fascinated by the bubbles so we spent a bit of time talking about how gas also erupts out of volcanoes.
At the end of this experiment, Levi stated, "It didn't explode. All it did was blow bubbles out!"




Later the boys cut out volcanoes and glued on tissue paper for the lava. Levi did so well cutting on some lines I drew and he did the tissue paper all on his own. He was so proud. Clarey just loved feeling the lava on both the crayon volcanoes and tissue paper. Other than that, she could care less about volcanoes. Our next activity - an edible volcano. I think we'll wait for Cyle to be home so he can help eat it!

A few comments:

Did you know that there are some volcanoes that are flat? And fire comes out of them when they are flat?... I saw that in that book. - Levi

Mom, I just know that is a volcano exploding! It has to be. It really, really is a volcano. Don't you see all that smoke? - Clayton, one morning as we were driving down to Jackson and saw the steam coming out of a smokestack at plant in Ste. Gen county

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Getting the Perfect Christmas Card Photo

Yesterday morning, I wanted to very quickly get the kids' picture taken for our Christmas card. Hallmark had a promotion going on and I wanted to take advantage of it! No big deal. I'll put the kids in their Christmas-sy outfits and snap a few shots in front of the tree. In a nutshell, this is how it went:



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And the winner was...





Yes. Out of over 100 shots, this photo was the ONLY one where all three are looking towards the camera and happy about it.