Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts

Saturday, August 10, 2013

We're baaaaaack...

After a very extended blogging break, I'm going to try to get back into it. Life got busy, but I miss having an online "scrapbook" of our lives!

Here are a few things we've been up to this summer, in no particular order:

 Buds at basketball camp



 Yummy fruit pizza!



 Ice cream!



 Little Man's first fish



 Flag football tournaments



 Swim lessons



 Tennis lessons



 Mini golf



 Football in the pouring rain



 Exploring



 Sunsets at the beach with good friends



 Z-Man joined the swim team!



 So much beauty



Playing at Harvard



Oh, and trick shots with basketballs and footballs. Lots and lots of trick shots. Off the roof, the swing set, the trampoline... but that will have to be another post. Hopefully with a video.

It feels good to be back.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Why does summer go so fast?


Oh my! The summer is flying by! Please forgive my extended absence from this blog. The weather has been lovely and we've been out having fun.

Some of the things we've been up to:


Baseball!

Picnics and water gun fights

Enjoying the fruits of summer

Weddings!

Meeting new friends

I'll certainly try to get back here a little more frequently in the next few weeks! I hope you are all enjoying your summer as much as we are!

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

The Kick-Off Field Trip!


Instead of starting school last week, we went on vacation. One of the major perks of homeschooling is that you can go on vacation without the crowds. Lovely. Of course, being a homeschooling family also means that we feel compelled to take advantage of any educational opportunities on our way or anywhere near our destination. And so, since we were reasonably close to Boston last week AND we're studying American History this year, we HAD to go walk the Freedom Trail. And go see some battleships. And some forts. It was a great field trip. I mean, vacation.

Seriously, though, we were so amazingly blessed. A friend asked if we wanted to stay in his apartment all week while he was in Europe. Um, YES!!! The weather was beautiful and we had a great time just all hanging out together. It really was a wonderful way to start a school year!

The men on the USS Massachusetts


Hanging out at the Old North Church in Boston


Firing at innocent passers-by from the deck of the USS Constitution (Old Ironsides)


Ben and Z-Man on the Freedom Trail


Handling some discipline problems at a fort on the Maine coast.


Boat watching


Exploring tide pools


Football on the beach


And a very thankful family!!

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Baseball Camp!

Things don't always go according to plan. The plan this summer was to have multiple sports-themed camps but here we are in August and, well... we've done tons of fun things but the camps just kept getting pushed back. This past week, the calendar was somewhat emptier and we finally had baseball camp! I'm happy to tell you that it was a great success!

Every day at breakfast there were announcements about what was going on that day - batting practice, catching practice, field trips, arts and crafts, etc. Then all campers did their K.P. chores and reported for morning service.

I found a little league coach who put up videos of himself giving baseball-related Bible lessons! I love the internet.

We also did a lesson on obedience where everyone got to be first and third base coach and tell the runner what to do. We talked about the fact that the runner can't be looking around to see what's happening, he just has to run as hard as he can. He listens to the base coach who can see what's happening on the field. Likewise, we don't know what's going to happen in our lives or even five minutes from now, but we can listen to God who does know and to our parents to whom He gives wisdom and discernment.

After morning service each day, we had baseball class. Here are some of the things we used:

Baseball Basics - many, many short little videos on every aspect of baseball. What is an inning, what are the defensive positions, what's an RBI, etc. Warning: there are commercials before the videos start - some were funny Geico ads but one was a very inappropriate beer commercial. Just so you know.

How to Play Baseball - by Goofy. This is old Disney - maybe from the 1940's - my kids loved it.

Baseball Poetry - you know we had to read Casey at the Bat and Casey's Revenge!

Baseball Music - listen to thousands of Cardinals fans sing "Take Me Out to the Ball Game!"

Who's On First? - Abbott and Costello. Gotta love it.

Interactive Baseball Math Game! - This is just brilliant. You can do addition, subtraction, multiplication or division. If your answer is right, you get a hit. The difficulty of the problem determines if it's a single, double, triple or home run. If you're wrong, you're out and the game ends after three outs.

Intro. to Sabermetrics (Baseball Stats) - My goodness. There are stats for everything in baseball.

Then on to Arts and Crafts - we did some pretty basic crafts - sand art and such but the first day we named our cabins (rooms) and made signs for them.

Outside for batting and catching practice, preceded by warm-up exercises, of course.

Cabin Clean-Up! It has to be a competition, you understand. The Camp Director (Mark) picks the cleanest cabin and they win a prize at the end of the week. Usually it's ice cream but this year it may be nerf guns. We'll see.

And, of course, we had to have a field trip! Unfortunately, there was a rain delay but it turned out to be really cool. We got to watch the ground crew roll out the huge tarp to cover the infield and everyone cheered when it stopped raining (pouring, actually) and they rolled it back up and continued the game.




All in all, a great week of baseball camp!

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Give me shelter


The kid's program at the environmental center this year has focused on animal shelters. The boys have made little homes for chipmunks (in the rain), built bat boxes and, most recently, made kid shelters in the woods. They had a ball with this one.

The workers:



The finished shelter:


A job well done:


Friday, July 23, 2010

Water guns and watermelon

The warriors


The attack


The ambush


And watermelon juice running all down the front


What's better than being a kid in the summer?

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Do-it-yourself summer camp


Summer is right around the corner! Oh, how I love summer. I love the promise of getting things done that I don't have time for during the year. I love for my kids to have some time where they can wake up in the morning and know the day is all theirs (well, after chores) - to hit golf balls for three hours straight, or sit in a tree and read a book or


spend all afternoon creating a "dirt track" for their hot wheels in what used to be just a flat, boring piece of lawn. Ahem.

Summer is a great time to really immerse yourself in a certain interest or subject. That's kind of what we do with our do-it-yourself summer camps.

We've been making our own summer camps since before Little Man was born. There's usually a theme like cowboy camp, nature camp or dinosaur camp, depending on the current interest.

Camp is right here at our house and lasts one week, which is about as long as I can tolerate living on a really strict schedule. We usually plan two or three camps in a summer. The trick with this whole camp thing is for the adults to really go along with the whole "pretending our house is turned into a camp" idea. Kids love it when their parents play along.

Campers are up early to tidy their cabin (bedroom) and get dressed to go to the mess hall (kitchen.) During breakfast, announcements are made detailing the day's crafts, sports and special activities and revealing what cabin is winning any contests. A detailed daily schedule is posted on the white board, including:

Morning chores
Morning service - songs, prayers, a fun Bible lesson.
Craft time
Nature time
Projects
An activity - sports, trip, etc.
Read-alouds
Free time

The first day's craft is always choosing the cabin name and designing the sign. These are then posted on the bedroom doors. The camp director (Mark) judges cabin tidiness after dinner each night and announces a winner. At the end of the week, the cabin with the most wins gets to go out for ice cream. (OK, I have to come clean here. It's rigged - the kids' room always wins. But we all get ice cream.)

Projects are usually big things like planting flowers around the patio or painting the adirondack chairs. My kids are young and still enjoy doing things like that.

We get as many books on our subject as we can possibly find and spend lots of time reading them, aloud and individually.

Some things we've done for individual camps:

Dinosaur camp - we created our first ever lapbook from Homeschool Share. A friend brought her 20 plus dinosaurs over for the week and we created a dinosaur museum.

At the end of the week, we discovered dinosaur bones in the back yard. We had to chip them out of a hard, rock-like substance and then try to figure out what kind of dinosaur we had. Z-Man was so excited. Come to think of it, our dinosaur actually glowed in the dark too. Can't beat that.

Cowboy camp - we read, played, crafted, learned cowboy songs, had a camp fire and attempted to learn some rope tricks after watching a video. They're harder than they look. This is probably a blessing. If one had the ability to rope, one might be sorely tempted to rope one's little brother.

Nature camp - we've done this one several times. There is so much to do:

Solar prints
Nature scavenger hunts and Nature Bingo
Photography safari
Make natural dyes from plants
Make a nature museum
Sand sculptures

Catching tadpoles and raising them
Making tiny animal houses out of things found in the woods
Making bridges across small streams with fallen branches
Exploring and claiming new territory
Mountain climbing


Bark rubbings
Leaf prints
Making plaster casts of animal tracks

Things we haven't gotten to yet but might this summer:

making a water scope out of a milk carton
tree bingo at a local arboretum
attend a work day for one of the hiking trails in the area
tenting in the back yard

There are so many books just packed full of great ideas, but I'm pretty sure I got the water scope idea here:



And since this post is getting waaaaay longer than I anticipated, I will have to tell you our plans for THIS summer in another post. Think sports. Lots of sports.


Summer Luge?!?