Field Work Friday – Golfin’ Buddies
Field Work Friday – Playing the Guitar
Musical instruments are exciting. Hard to play, perhaps not exciting to practice, but always exciting to be able to hang out, make music, and bring people together.
Pastor Jason, a Duke seminary student interning at Warren’s Grove UMC this summer, is a great guitarist. He’s also wonderful with children, and so he agreed to give us a group guitar lesson.
Field Work Friday – The Fire Station
The fire station has been, in my opinion, one of our most informative visits so far. Maybe that’s because one of their main goals is to educate so that they aren’t needed – but at any rate, the firefighters who visited with us were wonderful.
Field Work Friday – Ethiopia
It takes 16 hours to fly from North Carolina to Ethiopia’s capital city and then another 16 hours to travel by Land Rover to the southern villages where Jason works. Outside of the city the roads are rough dirt and full of potholes, people, and animals. He said that honking is an acceptable means of asking people to watch out!
Ethiopia is the only African county that was never colonized. Because of that, and because an Ethiopian man visited with Paul in the Bible and there were early Christian settlements there, Ethiopia is quite friendly to foreign missionaries. It is not the only faith there, however; another popular one being Islam.
Jason brought along a laptop and showed us pictures and videos of his travels. Despite the extreme dryness, the landscape was very green and beautiful.
He brought a favorite Ethiopian snack, too: /fond-i-shaa./ (No idea how to spell that – but that’s my phonetic version.) Popcorn!
My Little Man is excited about his popcorn. He’s also been telling everyone about the bumpy roads and grassy houses of “Indotheopia.” I’m sure he’ll figure out the name soon.
I hear that there’s an Ethiopian restaurant in Raleigh. Maybe one of these days we’ll venture down and try something new!
I didn’t realize I had so many preconceived notions about Ethiopia until I heard Jason speak. It sounds like a beautiful, friendly, wild, hardworking nation.
What nation would you like to learn more about??
Field Work Friday – Eating Egyptian
Field Work Friday – Scavenger Hunts at Duke Gardens
This week we ventured to the Sarah P. Duke Gardens, part of Duke University. I planned several scavenger hunt sheets so that our children, who usually range in age from 1 to 8, could all participate in some way.
Because the temperature was supposed to get into the mid-90s, we met at 9 AM. After arranging our meeting places and picking up maps, we headed out into the 50+ acre garden.
While I was excited about searching out different items with My Little Man and then discussing them with the group as a whole over a picnic lunch, I was very excited to introduce my friend Noelle to our group.
Noelle has been honing her photography skills for years and agreed to take pictures of our children while we hunted throughout the garden. Because this particular garden is so diverse and has so many fountains and special features, it makes the perfect place for special pictures.
(If you would live in our neck of the woods and would like fabulous pictures of your children or next event, you can check out Noelle’s blog. Contact her for more information!)
We’ll have Noelle’s pictures back soon, but you can see some of the topics for the various scavenger hunts. We didn’t do all of these, but we found pieces of them all ….
For those of us doing the number hunt, we found a plant with ONE main base.
For those people doing the color search, we found an animal with RED wings.
We found a rock that could be used like a chair, just as Jessie did in The Boxcar Children, for those people doing the literature hunt.
We found SPHERICAL flowers, a shape needed on the shape hunt.
Of course, all that hunting made us very hot and thirsty ..
It was tempting to just step right off those stones …
but we stuck to our water bottles, instead.
If you would like to take these scavenger hunts outside yourself, you can find copies of them here.
Have you done an old-fashioned scavenger hunt lately? What interesting things can you find in your backyard or local park?
Field Work Friday – Duke Chapel
This week we ventured somewhere a bit different: Duke Chapel on the Duke University Campus in Durham, North Carolina.
Knowing only that it’s a beautiful church, we were anxious to see what it looks like – and we weren’t disappointed!
We parked in a nearby parking garage and walked up to the Chapel from the side.
Doesn’t it look old and Gothic?
We learned from our fabulous tour guide Betty that it’s neither. In true Gothic architecture, the tower is over the altar or on either side of it, but the people who commissioned this building wanted it to stand out – so they had a large tower built over the Narthex.
The stone for this enormous building came from nearby Hillsborough.
Wow.
The detail work in this building is amazing. Everything is hand-carved from wood or stone. As you walk through the large oak doors into the Narthex, six statues stand on either side. I must confess that I can’t remember who all of these men were, but Martin Luther stands on the left of the doorway and in the above picture, Robert E. Lee is in the middle.
The ceiling of the Narthex is a very long ways up – and even that is incredibly detailed.
Much of the detail work in the Chapel centers around the number three, symbolizing the Trinity. You can see it in this front-door window …
and carved into the archway above every door.
After entering the Navis, or Nave, the main part of the sanctuary, one must trek 291 feet to the altar. Must be awful for nervous brides!
There are 77 windows in the Nave consisting of over 1 million pieces of stained glass in two tiers. The upper windows feature scenes from the Old Testament, while the lower windows feature New Testament stories.
The Chapel has two organs – one in front and one in back. The one in the back is the bigger of the two and is played for an hour each day. It is absolutely enormous – and it creates very beautiful music.
Over 1500 people can attend services at this church at one time. The choir seats 150, and this area also features lots of amazing carvings.
A small chapel off to the left of the altar has a much homier feel, still with extravagantly beautiful windows …
and three sarcophagi carved from Italian marble.
Downstairs the windows are simpler …
and there’s a children’s play area, though I don’t know if I could get used to having my children attend Sunday School in a crypt. Not sure about that.
Heading back upstairs …
we looked for some of the funny quirks that the carvers created as they worked. Can you find the mouse they carved into this column?
Duke Chapel is an amazing building full of history and beauty. It’s open every weekday and for services on Sunday, so if you’re ever in the area, stop in and check it out! You won’t be sorry.
Our everyday surroundings quickly become routine and we miss the special beauty all around us. What fun attractions and architecture might be fun to explore with your child?
Field Work Friday – Visiting DOT Headquarters
Visiting a construction site was high on my list of things-to-do, but how could our little ones get up-close-and-personal to a working dump truck? I was stumped for a bit, and finally called the local government office in charge of road repairs. I was referred several times, but finally sent to our local DOT headquarters (I didn’t even know we had one!) where the man in charge generously agreed to all an unknown number of preschoolers visit.
Field Work Friday – Dental Hygiene
This week we were visited by Pat, a dental hygienist for a local pediatric dentist. That might not sound too exciting, but Pat brought along Ally the Alligator and shared lots of good tips for caring for your teeth.
Pat talked to us about how important it was to brush our teeth each morning and before bedtime, and that taking care of our gums is crucial. She told us that dentists recommend that children spend 6 minutes each evening on dental hygiene, both brushing and flossing, and that parents should be involved until age 10. Pat also showed us how to brush in small circles, not scrubbing, on each tooth, and then brushing downwards three times while singing, “Wiggle, jiggle, wiggle, jiggle, 1, 2, 3” and then moving on to the next one. She let each child practice on Ally – though Luke was a big shy of her big smile.
After Pat left we concluded a science project to demonstrate just how important it is to brush.
Start with a jar (I’d recommend a wide-mouth one), an egg, a tube of toothpaste, and some vinegar. I’ve used both cider and white for this – both work fine.
Squeeze out the tube of toothpaste into the jar. Try not to get any on the sides. I realize that this seems like a lot, but it takes a lot for this to work – and it’s a very visual demo of why brushing and toothpaste is important.
Next, nestle the egg into the toothpaste nest at the bottom. Bury half of the egg in the toothpaste and let the other half sticking out, hopefully toothpaste-free (this is why a wide-mouth jar is important – my hand didn’t fit in there well!).
Using the egg as a target so that none of the toothpaste washes away, slowly pour vinegar into the jar on top of the egg. Fill the jar to about an inch past the top of the egg.
Let the jar sit for 2-5 days. I wouldn’t wait much longer than that, but it will take a few days for the magic to happen. When the egg is ready, you should see that lovely cloud of bubbles at the top of the egg. Again, be sure to wait a few days! Just set it on a shelf somewhere and watch what happens while the vinegar works.
When it’s time, pour out the vinegar and rescue the egg. Holding it carefully, wipe away or wash under a gentle spray of water to remove excess toothpaste.
Your egg will now look like this! The vinegar, an acid, has eaten away at the shell of the egg, which is made of protein.
If you consider the eggshell to be like the enamel on your teeth, you can see what plague will do to the finish of your teeth. Be sure to carefully tap your fingernail on the white shell – see how hard and firm it still is? Didn’t the toothpaste do a great job of protecting it from the tough plague germs?
Then try to tap the soft brown top. The shell is gone, leaving only the outer membrane. Pushing gently, you can actually push into the egg – it’s that soft. Who wants a tooth that looks like this?!! I think I’ll brush!
Disclaimer: As this entire project is done with a raw egg, dispose of egg carefully when finished. I’ve never broken one in nearly 10 years of doing this project, so the eggs are tougher than they look – but I’m sure it’s still possible, and I know they won’t smell pretty if they break. 🙂