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Friday, June 3, 2011

March 2011

On March 5th we tried on crazy St. Patty's Day hats at WalMart.

On the 7th I had my preschoolers make Mardi Gras masks. Faith made one out of the leftover supplies after she got home from school that day. I love how she made blue fluffy eyelashes out of feathers!

On the 12th I got this cute shot of Faith with Crumpet. I didn't realize until just now how Christian interacts more with the cat and Faith more with the dog. Still, they each love both of our pets and are always begging for more.

Faith brought home this cute pretzel cabin that she made at school for President's Day. I love the added touch of Lincoln (on the penny) in the doorway!

This had been hanging up on our metal decoration where we post cards and crafts. It's the Savage family Valentine card:
                                 front
                                back
We were so surprised and excited! Recently we found out the baby is a boy and they've been thinking about names. Brandt, Mason and Enoch are the front runners at this point. I'm so looking forward to meeting the little guy this fall and seeing if my doula/hypnobirthing skills work just as well this time around!

We also took down these darling pictures of a groundhog seeing his shadow. Faith made one and Buddy wanted to make one just like it. Click the picture to get a better view (sorry the color is weird on the artwork, I tried my best to darken the image up so that you can see it well).

On the 12th we stopped to feed the ducks at Barnes Park,

then took a trip to Kangaroo Zoo.


We even did their black light mini golf this time!

The 14th was Pi day (π = 3.14...) so we had chicken pot pie for dinner and pie for dessert. Actually, I'm not a huge fan of most pies so I made a chiffon cheesecake in a graham cracker crust pie shell and had frozen mixed berries for the top :)   (Christian is not unhappy, this is just one of his many "cool" looks that he likes to try when mugging for the camera!)

On the 16th Buddy sat through the PTA meeting so well that I treated him to Yogo Togo frozen yogurt.

When we got home he made this awesome "Spider Man hand" that shoots (imaginary) web.

That night the kids put together an amazing and very intricate leprechaun trap:





Here is the description of how it works:


Unfortunately, the little bugger was too sly for us--he was in the trap but somehow escaped. He left behind his little footprints as well as confusion from having traded the items in our drawers and cabinets (especially hiding the silverware and kids' bowls), switching around our pantry (moving the cereal boxes up to a high shelf), and coloring our milk green. What a tricky guy!

For Fun Friday on the 18th I decided to do experiments having to do with ice, liquids and surface tension. First, I had a big block of ice I had frozen in a tupperware container. I sprinkled the top with salt and then dripped on food coloring. The salt melted cracks in the ice which the coloring seeped into making a really cool art piece! Next I passed out cups of water and ice to the kids along with some string and showed them how the string didn't stick to the ice at first, but after laying it over and sprinkling with salt, the top melted and refroze the ice to the string. I got these ideas from this blog.

Next I had a large vase filled with hot water and a little pimento jar (thanks Jenn, you're a lifesaver!) filled with cold water and a little blue food coloring. After I lowered the small jar down into the vase, we observed that the blue water stayed in. I then dumped both and filled the vase with cold water and the small jar with hot water and red food coloring. After lowering that one in, it looked like a water volcano, with the red water erupting out and up in the cold water! This picture is the closest thing I could find online, but here is a cool video of something similar.

After that I did the experiment where water gets sucked up into a jar. I started with colored water in a pie plate, a burning candle in the center of the water, and then placed a mason jar over the candle. As the flame heats the air, it expands and escapes out of the bottom of the jar. Water gets sucked in as soon as the air starts to cool. Here's a pretty good video of the experiment.

Next I did the colorful milk experiment. I poured some milk into the pie plate and then dropped food coloring onto it. I got dish soap on a q-tip and put it into the milk, making the coloring swirl around. Part of the reason has to do with breaking the surface tension, but the real action comes from the properties of the soap breaking up the fats in the milk. Check it out!

Lastly, I showed them water droplets on waxed paper and how they have a spherical shape. I passed out pieces of wire to the kids and had them make bubble blowing wands out of them in shapes instead of circles. We took them outside and found that they still made round bubbles! They weren't the greatest wands, the bubbles tended to pop just as they left the blowers, but still fun! (That's Spencer, Faith's "friend" looking at the camera and Faith and Buddy are farther back on the left.)

Of course, we stayed for lunch and recess.

After saving this shell from our preschool "Volcano Lava Luau" day when we ate lots of coconut, Buddy had me write "coconut head" on a piece of paper which he attached inside. For reasons known only to him, it's a hilarious joke to hand this to people :)

I was putting some artwork away in the memory box and had to get a shot of Christian's darling hand and finger print koala that he made at our preschool.

On the 26th we used a Christmas gift card and went out to eat at The Olive Garden. Christian was too busy playing to eat his fettuccine until the very end when we were ready to go. He shoved almost the entire thing in his mouth at once (hence the alfredo sauce dripping down his chin.) Way to keep it classy, Bro!

On the 30th we celebrated April Fools Day in preschool so I played a couple of pranks on the kids. First, I found dog poop on the carpet and, after picking it up with toilet paper and making a big deal about how gross and stinky it was, popping it in my mouth (mini Baby Ruth candy bar). I put out a small bag of puffy Cheetos and apple juice for snack, but the kids found carrots instead of  Cheetos sealed inside the bag and were really confused when they couldn't drink their juice (it was lemon jello).

For art I passed out finger paints to the kids and warned them that although they were really bright and fun, they were also very poisonous so they had to be careful with them. I showed them how to paint on one half of the paper and then fold it and open it back up to make a positive mirror image. Then, on  another paper, spreading glops of paint, folding it, and drawing with a crayon on the outside of the folded paper so that when you opened it there was a negative (the drawing was white while the surrounding was color) mirror image (it was opposites day at preschool that day). I kept making a big deal about how dangerous the paint was, but at the end I "accidentally" licked my finger!! Before the kids came unglued, I quickly shouted "April Fools!" and explained that the paint was just pudding with food coloring in it. It was a fun day at preschool!

Anyway, after Faith came home she and Buddy had a blast with the leftover finger paints and made about a zillion masterpieces.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

February 2011

On February 2nd we went to SEP conference. Faith is doing great and just has to work a little more on her reading comprehension. Well, actually she just has to read more. That's the kind of extra work that I'd like to have!

That evening we celebrated Groundhog Day by watching the movie of the same name and eating sausage (which is made from ground hog).

I began our membership contest. It's hard to tell from this picture, but each of the brown papers look like bowing lanes and the little colored circles are supposed to be bowling balls. The kids get their name on a bowling ball for each parent with a PTA membership, and the class with the most bowling balls at the end of the contest wins a Wii Bowling party.

On the 4th we had a Valentines party with Ann+kids and Natalie+kids. It was so fun to visit with Natalie, we hadn't hung out since last fall! Unfortunately Ann had to leave early, but Natalie had the kids do a fun craft with red paper plates, sparkly pompoms and glitter made into shakers (here's a similar tutorial if you would like to make some).

We saw Megamind at the Kaysville dollar movie on the 5th.

Faith got her braces off on the 8th!! I forgot to take a better pic at the orthodontist office and hurried to get this one just before dropping her off at school. Those teeth look like a million bucks! And only cost thousands!

On the 11th Faith and Buddy got another sleepover at Grandma and Grandpa Peterson's, this time with Sierra and Lily.

On the 12th the kids got to make music boxes at Lowe's.

The weather was finally a little nice, so we stopped by Barnes Park on the way to visit the family on the 13th.


My mom had a Valentine's party for the kids that night. Mylar balloons, gifts,

and these awesome pop-up balloons:

On the 14th we got the anual ding-dong-dash of gifts from Grandma Braegger and Tammy. Then we had "special" dinner of pasta with spaghetti sauce and alfredo sauce, served on china, with goblets of sparkling pomegranate juice and a lit candle (which firebug Buddy obsessed over the whole time). Daddy had even gotten us this fabulous ice cream cake!

On the 18th I did my Fun Friday teaching for Faith's class. I thought the subject I came up with--attraction, was perfectly appropriate for the month of February :)  I did some experiments with ring magnets on a pencil, showing how like poles repel and opposite poles attract. I made a compass out of a magnet and a needle and talked about how the Earth's North Magnetic Pole is actually a magnetic field south pole. I had a bottle of baby oil with tiny clippings from fine steel wool in it and used a magnet to show magnetic fields (similar to this video). I showed the effects of static electricity with a homemade electroscope (here's a fancier one in action, I used a glass with a paperclip hanging through cardboard and a comb that we ran through several kids' hair). I even bent water with static electricity! At the end I had the kids do an experiment in pairs with balloons on string--seeing how they interacted initially, after one was rubbed on a kid's head to negatively charge the balloon, and then after both were. Lastly I gave the kids some cardstock, a magnet and a paperclip so they could make a moving car on a road (like this) or any other moving item on a background. (Just now while I was looking up an example for the blog, I came across this fun idea of ice skaters on an old cd.) It was another fun lesson!

Afterward, we ate school lunch. I wasn't excited about it being hot dogs, but I have to give them credit for trying to make them healthier. The buns were whole wheat, the fries were baked sweet potato fries, and the other sides were applesauce, grapes, salad, carrot sticks, and a frozen peach cup.
Probably not enough to make Jamie Oliver happy (especially the chocolate milk), but a good try. (Have you been watching Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution? It's good t.v. with a purpose!)


Hot dogs for lunch again the next day, but this time they were free! R.C. Willey's was celebrating President's Day.

Here the kids are on the 21st poking their heads out of the moon roof of our car while we were waiting in the parking lot somewhere.

Buddy took some pics and ended up with two gems--this colorful one of cereal and the camera's strap:

and the ever fluffy Dusty's backside:

On the 25th we had Ann and the kids over for a playdate and the kids enjoyed the Just Dance 2 Wii game that the kids scored because Faith traded in her Sims game that she didn't like. They are so funny!
(sorry to those who can't watch YouTube, it was too long to upload in Blogger)

I scored an awesome deal on gift certificates to Sweet Afton's candy shop in Gardner Village from Deals That Matter. They had a $10 certificate for only $5, but you get a $5 credit just for signing up. Tony and I each got one so we had $20 for free! (Sorry that I didn't notify anyone of the deal--total brain fart!) On the 26th we headed down south for some sugary goodness.

Of course we easily collected $38 worth, so we still had to shell out some cash. We mainly came for the Taffy Town saltwater taffy (which is a million times better than Sweet's) since Faith is braces free and can have chewy stuff!

And lastly, Christian asked me to capture this moment of love (and sheer strength) between him and his fluffy (and I'm not just talking about the fur) cat.

(my favorite quote from the movie Ice Age-- Sid: "I mean it's hard to get fat on a vegan diet." Mannie: "I'm not fat! It's all this fur. It makes me look...poofy." Sid: "All right, you have fat hair. But, when you're ready to talk, I'm here." )

Saturday, May 7, 2011

January 2011

We had such a busy December that we kept January very low key. Christian did lots of snuggling with his Dust Buster.

We volunteered at the school giving children the DIBELS test (counting how many words they can read correctly from selected stories). It took nearly three hours and Christian was a trooper!

Faith did this great animal habitat diorama.

It had to include four living things in addition to the pandas which were the main subject (bamboo, leopard, red panda, and a Hupeh Rowan tree) and four non-living things (soil, Chinese temple, clouds, bones from the leopard's meal). I think she did an amazing job! They each made their main animal out of Model Magic clay in class and Faith was super busy helping all of her classmates after they saw what a great job she did on her own :)

Buddy and I visited Faith (and did some PTA work) and had lunch at school with her.

Christian LOVES sending the bank cylinder through the pneumatic tube at the bank. He also loves receiving Dum Dum suckers.

For our January Fun Friday lesson in Faith's class, I told the children about elements and compounds. We made molecules out of colored mini marshmallows and toothpicks and I had them invent their own creative compound and write out the formula (example: PU2C-->Fairytale Land Molecule, with P=princess, U=unicorns, and C=castle).

On the 27th we went to the school for a reading activity. They had real-life applications for reading which included a short talk by author Val Bagley, reading the instructions to make a gingerbread man craft, writing postcards, and doing the written exam for their "driver's license" test. If they passed the written part, they got to do the driving test on wiggle cars! At the end they received a license which, as Faith was disappointed to find out, stated "License to Read." So cute!