Posts Tagged ‘summer’

What I Did on my Summer Vacation

Tuesday, September 6th, 2011

summer-vacation-ideas

This is what I did on my summer vacation years ago. Maybe it can give you ideas on what to do this summer:

  1. I intentionally rested: I basked in the sun, occasionally took a nap in the middle of the day, sat on the deck and opened my heart to God with no agenda.
  2. We had free tickets for the children to ride roller coasters at Silverwood, and the entire family had fun as we got splashed, raced forward, and spun in circles.
  3. We saw fireworks on the fourth of July.
  4. We picked strawberries and made crepes, strawberry shortcake, and strawberry mousse. The crepes were absolutely divine.
  5. I threw a Mexican fiesta for my son Nathaniels’ birthday.
  6. I went yard saling with my mom. We found a table and chairs to upgrade the little table and chairs that my kids were outgrowing.
  7. My three sisters came to visit, and we played card games, laughed and whooped til late into the night. My mom paid for professional massages for each of us.
  8. We went to a Leonardo da Vinci exhibit at the Museum of Arts and Culture. The kids were able to play with the models of all his inventions.
  9. I went hiking through a forest alone with my husband. We saw a beautiful waterfall, and it was a gorgeous day. We went off the path and had fun.
  10. The children had a water balloon fight.
  11. We went to local parks at least a dozen times.
  12. We played croquet on the cool grass on a sunny day.
  13. I threw a Chinese dragon party for my son Bryan. We did an Ancient China unit study leading up to his party.
  14. We listened to a Henty book on audio, The Young Carthaginian. It was the only book I didn’t get around to reading for the Ancient Rome unit study.
  15. The kids went to Vacation Bible School at my parents’ church. After dropping off my kids one morning, my mom took me out to breakfast. We had bacon, eggs, hash browns, and sourdough toast.
  16. On another morning while the kids were at church, I recorded the audio “Overcoming Burnout,” to be released in January through a new audio club I’m starting.
  17. I recorded ten Dread Pirate Susan YouTube videos, which I had been wanting to do for months. Each video has one fun writing idea for kids who don’t like writing. I will be releasing one per week for ten weeks.
  18. We went to the beach at a local lake several times. We blew up a large yellow boat thing that looked like a banana. (I got it at a yard sale.) The kids had a ball.
  19. We picked cherries and made cherry cobbler.
  20. I went to Zumba three times a week.
  21. I read a few books, including The Heavenly Man: the remarkable true story of Chinese Brother Yun. This book had me choked up with joy over and over, and it stretched my faith. It’s kind of like Voice of the Martyrs, but close up.
  22. I revamped my prayer life. I need to remember to wait on God more, have more margin, and quit rushing. I need to be still.
  23. I asked God direction for homeschooling for the fall, and I’ve written down goals for each of my children. I asked God about changing my schedule, and I felt peace about keeping it the same as last year.
  24. The kids performed a talent show for my sisters while they were here: “The Evans Kids Have Got Talent.” The mime act was my favorite.
  25. Our whole family went to the dollar movie theater to see a few movies released months earlier.
  26. I made three different digital yearbooks for each of my children who had birthdays. I packed in tons of photos showcasing each child and what they had accomplished over the school year.
  27. We made a whole set of beeswax candles one morning for Grandma’s birthday.
  28. We made chocolate bananas.
  29. The children made crafts: bowling pins, masks, Chinese lanterns, etc.
  30. The children rode bicycles with me around the neighborhood.
  31. I re-organized my house, especially kid stuff and homeschool stuff.
  32. We went swimming at the local YMCA.
  33. We watched science DVD’s from the local library: Popular Mechanics for Children and The Way Things Work. Both series of DVD’s are excellent.
  34. We made sun prints.
  35. I conducted some simple science experiments with my daughter. The experiments related to nature, since she loves working in her nature journal.
  36. The children ran around, playing with nerf guns.
  37. I asked God for direction regarding my website, and He gave me clear direction. I’m excited about what the future holds.
  38. I went on a cruise to the Bahamas with my husband, on the honeymoon we never had…

Chocolate Bananas

Sunday, September 4th, 2011

chocolate-bananas

Growing up in Guatemala, I used to eat frozen chocolate bananas called “chocobananos.” These frozen bananas were covered in a hard shell of chocolate. I thought to myself, “I bet those aren’t that hard to make, and they are healthy, too.” Plus, I want my own children to experience the joy of eating a chocolate banana.

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My friend that I grew up with in Guatemala told me to buy chocolate almond bark. You find it in the baking section of the grocery store. Don’t forget to buy the bananas, and make sure you have some popsicle sticks.

chocolate-banana-3

Peel the banachocobananonas and cut them in half. Stab them each with a popsicle stick. Place them on wax paper on a cookie sheet in the freezer. Let them freeze overnight.

The next day, melt the almond bark over medium heat in a pot on the stove. Stir constantly with a wooden spoon. Dip the bananas into it. The chocolate instantly hardens, and you can eat the chocolate bananas on the spot. Yum. Oh, put the leftovers in the freezer for a treat tomorrow, unless you’ve already eaten them all.

 

Water Balloon Fight

Wednesday, August 31st, 2011

Here is a video of my children having a water balloon fight:

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Celebrate With Us

The Myth of Losing Math Over the Summer

Monday, September 27th, 2010

losing-math-over-the-summerThis past summer was the first time I did not do math with my children for three months. I have always homeschooled three months on, one month off, to have three huge breaks during the year, with no break being so long that the kids were bored half out of their minds. Well, this summer I had a lot to do for my business, so I decided to take a real summer break. Of course, we ended up doing tons of homeschooling anyways by accident because we can’t help learning all the time. But we did no math whatsoever.

After three weeks of school, I realize that it’s a complete farce that kids lose their math over the summer. Sure, if the kids never learned their multiplication tables for real, they might not remember them. But they never really learned them in the first place. Timed drills can help your child to really learn their math facts until they are second nature. Anyway, math programs assume that you’ve taken the summer off, and they make the first few weeks easy-peasy on purpose to review what was done the previous year.

Just look back on your own childhood memories. Didn’t some of your best childhood memories take place on the long and lazy summer days? Weren’t you all refreshed to start the new school year in September because you were happy to get into the swing of things after so long a break? Should I never give my children the gift of a real summer holiday, where they can play and run and fill their days with their own ideas of what they would like to pursue?

It was my children’s first summer break ever this year, and I’m glad we did it. They didn’t lose their math. They’re getting A’s. “Mom, this math is so easy,” they say. So now I know that losing math over the summer is a complete myth, and I now have the freedom to take a summer break if that’s what we want to do. Hurray for summer!