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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home1/lehrerin/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Building a nest on the rocks of faith and family
by Amy
by Amy
In honor of Cinco de Mayo, we visited a local Mexican restaurant for lunch. Many of the people who were there are from Mexico, and the manager agreed to speak to us about the significance of the holiday.
We ate at Torero’s, a local place with bright decor, flat-screens mounted near the ceilings throughout, and a very yummy menu. (Well, the food is good, not the menu itself, but you know what I mean.)
This is my chair. See what I mean? The whole place is like this – tables, chairs, wall hangings, etc. It’s very bright, but there’s lots to look at, and my kids love to go there – because they can eat chips while they wait for their meals, and so they can talk about all the things carved into our table. It’s just fun.
First, we ate, with my kids really getting into the Mexican theme. My Little Man with his ‘matoes, nuggets, and rice …
and My Big Helper with her cheeseburger. Oh, well! (Most of the rest of us did actually eat Mexican food – but I must admit, they do have good burgers!)
While we finished our meal, the fabulous manager David brought over one of his staff members to tell us about the history of Cinco de Mayo. Basically, we learned that the holiday is a celebration of a Mexican defeat over Spain back in the 1800s, and that the holiday carries with it no special foods or traditional means of celebration. Whatever the case, we certainly celebrated with an abundance of chips, salsa, and chicken nuggets!
David and his staff were very kind in sharing a bit of their heritage with us. Are there any restaurants near you where you could visit and learn a bit of another culture?
by Amy
Christmas is a-comin’
And the goose is gettin’ fat!
Please to put a penny in an old man’s hat.
If you haven’t got a penny then a ha’penny would do,
If you haven’t got a ha’penny then God bless you!
We used to play the ‘Bonanza’ Christmas album that features that song over and over at Christmastime when I was a kid. I don’t hear it often anymore, but it does hint around at the real spirit of Christmas.
Last week for playgroup we tried to focus on the real reason for the season. We met at a local church, where the pastor read the children a story by Ruth Graham that talked about the very first Christmas.
After that, he assigned each child a part in the Christmas story, and they dressed up using simple costumes that the church had on hand. (I think it would be really fun to make some costumes like this sometime ….) The pastor then read the Christmas story from the book of Luke and directed each ‘actor’ when his part was read. The angel was very excited about his wings!
After that, it was time to break loose for a bit. Everyone brought craft supplies, and the kids made cards for our next field trip, when we’ll visit with the residents at an assisted living center. Some were especially excited about fancy scissors, while others were more interested in decorating shapes and gluing them onto their cards..
Soon we’ll visit the center and sing to the residents and pass out the cards we’ve made. What better way for little ones to spread some Christmas cheer than with crayons and song?
by Amy
When I was a kid, I remember sitting in a movie theater at the start of a show, watching the flickering lights, and turning around to see where it was coming from. I always wondered what was behind the small window high in the wall, and somehow I pictured a white-haired man in a black suit, perched on a stool beside an ancient projector.
That’s not what you’ll find in our local movie theater.
This week our playgroup headed out to Palace Pointe for a behind-the-scenes tour of how movies are shown.
The theater manager, Andy, has worked in theaters for 16 years now. After meeting us in the lobby, he escorted us into the elevator and through the hallways to the projection room.
Expecting a small, dark space, imagine my amazement when we found ourselves in a large, bright, white-tiled room! Super clean and very bright, Andy said that dust is the enemy of any theater because it will show up as spots and splotches onscreen. Film machines actually have to be cleaned after each showing to keep everything operating smoothly.
Andy explained that each square in the film represented 1/24th of a second. Wow!
Then he showed us the ‘commercials,’ the ads for other movies that play prior to the start of the feature presentation.
Much smaller and tightly bound, he even let our children pass around one. They had never really seen film before, so this was a big deal! Funny how things change, isn’t it?
All of this will soon be completely obsolete, however, because new requirements make it impossible to show film past December of this year.
by Amy
Last week we traveled to the Durham Bulls’ Athletic Park for a complete tour of the stadium. We were all excited to return to the stadium, but especially to see into the areas where visitors don’t usually go!
My camera decided to be funky when we arrived, so these pictures were all taken by my friend Jennifer and kindly shared. Thanks, Jennifer!
The luxury box consists of a large room with several different areas. Of course, there are cushy chairs in front of a granite countertop by large windows that overlook the field; but there’s also a table in the center with a kitchen area behind it.
At one end of the kitchen , just behind the table, is the barber shop. Outside the luxury box, just beside the window, is an old-fashioned barber pole.
The kitchen was very pretty. It must be fun to serve game foods there.
Outside of the elevator that took us up and down on our tour sits Wool E. Bull on a bench. We were all excited to see him there and so had to stop for pictures.
As we moved out of this corridor, we visited the dugouts, the practice room, and the locker room. My Little Man loved visiting all of these official, players-only areas. It’s really neat to see what’s happening behind the scenes.
So if you’re ever looking for a fun, family outing and you’re in the Durham area, be sure to check out the Bulls’ stadium. It’s worth the trip!
by Amy
This week we ventured to Raleigh to go to the State Farmer’s Market. This place is amazing – multiple huge shelters full of locally grown fruits and vegetables, plants, trees, meats, nuts, and crafty things like homemade soaps.
The place is enormous – this is only half of one shelter, and there are two others. With many farmers offering samples of watermelons, grapes, apples, and cantelope, we ate our way around the market.
Today was Apple Day, and free samples of apple products were advertised.
We were disappointed to learn that this apple crisp and some stickers was all they had – but the farmers more than made up for it.
This kind gentleman passed out samples of ice cold apple cider. It was fabulous!
Peaches were available, too, and we had to bring a few home.
There was an abundance of produce available, and we couldn’t decide exactly what to bring home. These tomatoes – with their funny sign – were on the list!
We couldn’t bring home nearly as much as we wanted to -but we met several nice people and had a nice picnic outside. We also found one farm willing to let us build our own box of apples – any varieties we wanted – and another who sold us two boxes of seconds at a great price.
Applesauce, here we come!
What are your favorite apple recipes??
by Amy
by Amy
Baseball season has begun, and so our boys chose to step up to the mound with this month’s book choice. They read “Shoeless Joe & Me” by Dan Gutman.
As always, we began inside by summarizing and talking about the book. While the boys aren’t usually particularly loquacious, they surprised me this month. The book is about the fixing of the World Series in 1919 and Shoeless Joe Jackson’s part therein. The boys compared this scandal to current drug scandals, brought up whether gambling is moral even if legal, wanted to know about steroids, and other issues related to the game. What a discussion!
Then we moved on to baseball cards. Each boy had brought a collection, and they were eager to check them out, although they didn’t all value the same types of cards.
Next we made our own peanut-free version of CrackerJack. It was yummy stuff!
While the CrackerJack set up, the boys designed their own baseball cards …
and showed them off a bit …
before deciding that all of this talk of baseball necessitated a game.
Of course, all of that running around made them hungry, and so we broke out our CrackerJack.
So if you’re looking for a good baseball book this season, you won’t go wrong with Shoeless Joe & Me. Just be prepared to grab some friends and go play afterwards – you won’t be able to resist the crack of the bat.
What are your kids’ favorite springtime reads?
by Amy
The weather has finally improved a bit here in the Carolinas, and so our book club moved outdoors for a grand adventure in the style of Peggy Parrish’s Pirate Island Adventure.
After discussing the book and its characters, each child created his own shield.
While they were drying, the boys began solving puzzles in the hopes of finding a great treasure.
They got really into this and worked hard to decipher the clues and figure out the meaning of each one. They really showed great teamwork!
After being stumped on one for quite a while, they finally decided it must be buried under the playset and started to dig – and lo and behold, they found a gold-wrapped chocolate treasure!
The boys worked together to divvy the treasure fairly, even sharing with the girls, before heading off to play in the sunshine.
Doesn’t my little warrior look fierce?
What are you kids reading this month?
by Amy
Would you eat a worm?
Would you eat 15 worms?
That’s the question our boys answered this month at book club, when we discussed How to Eat Fried Worms.
This book was the perfect one to follow Shoeless Joe and Me, last month’s book club selection. We again discussed gambling – what it was, whether it’s okay, and inflation amounts from 1973, when this book was originally published.
Then I asked the boys if they would be willing to eat a worm. Each one developed his own recipe for doing so – some more willingly than others. One was quite adamant that while it was fun to make a worm recipe, he would never actually eat a worm.
Then we moved into the kitchen.
Where worm eating became a reality.
I prepared each worm as the boys requested. Of course, these weren’t real worms, but concoctions of Jell-O, cream, and a few other ingredients carefully shaped.
The boys weren’t quite so brave when faced with a pile of real worms. Although My Little Man talked a big story of wormy ketchup and pepper, he didn’t really want to try it.
After one courageous kid tried the worms and declared them to be good, the others gradually tried them, too, and soon they were quite boisterous again …
Until I brought out the real crickets.
An adventurous mom had ordered these from Amazon for us. Who knew you could get bugs in such a variety of flavors? The first boy to try a worm carefully read the ingredient list and then opened the bacon and cheese flavored box of crickets. He declared them to be “crunchy” and ate all but three.
Nobody else would try them.
Can’t say that I blame them.
Then we moved on to worm science. We read a short non-fiction book about the body parts and benefits of worms to the environment and prepared to make our own worm houses. Each boy had his own jar to layer with gravel and then soil.
Then we broke out my dirt shovel and dug for worms. We found enough for each boy to have a few in his jar.
In the few days since book club, My Little Man has watched his worms carefully. He keeps them covered, since we learned that light can paralyze them, but he lifts the paper a few times each day to study the jar and watch for worm tunnels.
Who knew that worms could be so fascinating?
So – would YOU eat a worm?