Mid Week Catch Up: The weather, homeschool update, books, and other ramblings

The fire in the woodstove just would not cooperate Monday morning when I tried to get it to light. I am convinced something is wrong with our draft, like maybe it is stuck or something. I gently wiggled it a few times and the fire finally started to take off after burning up a ton of cardboard, papers, and even the box for some caffeine-free Diet Pepsi my son picked up the other day.

We will have to light a fire all week with the cold temperatures but soon we will be able to light a fire less and still turn the heat down. Having the fire helps us not to have to use as much heating oil and kept our heating oil usage down from mid-October through last week.

It is actually progress that my son purchased that soda I mentioned above since in the past he wouldn’t pick it up because it reminded him too much of his great-aunt, my aunt Dianne, who he loved immensely. She passed away in 2018. Talking about her was very painful for years but now he’s able to talk about her more, sharing the good and happy memories he has of her with his sister.

Buying the Pepsi was a chance for him to show Little Miss a version of Dianne’s favorite drink. Dianne drank Pepsi for years, partially because it was what she was used to since my grandfather worked for Pepsi in North Carolina for 30 years.

It’s Monday when I am starting this post and I have given Little Miss the day off from school since her brother had it off from the technical school he attends for President’s Day.

Tomorrow we will be back to our regular lessons.

This year she and I have been studying a lot of history through a variety of different ways, including a textbook through The Story of Our World. Like last year we are learning about history through historical fiction as well.

This week we will be starting a historical fiction book about Pocahontas.

I actually have two books about Pocahontas but decided that the one book may be for older children so have decided to go to one written by Jean Fritz, who we have read books by before, including The Cabin Faced West, which we finished a couple of weeks ago. The other book is written by Joseph Bruchac, who wrote Children of the Longhouse, which Little Miss absolutely loved, but seems to be written for teenagers. I am sure it is a clean book but it just seems a little older so I decided I am going to read it this spring and see if it is something Little Miss will like.

Reading historical fiction books helps us to branch out into other topics that are brought up in the stories, including information about historical figures or events. The textbook provides us with fairly dry facts only.

The subject I have struggled with the most this year for Little Miss has been science because I’m never happy with the science curriculum we have. I also never have the supplies we need for experiments. I always feel like I’m not teaching her enough science or the right science. She, however, has learned a lot of science from the educational shows she watches so I often find her correcting me when I am teaching her science from a book.

We really liked The Good and the Beautiful science but it is a bit expensive so I have decided to wait until we have that extra money to purchase curriculum and will probably purchase from there toward the end of our school year and then finish up the curriculum in our next school year. While their sets are expensive, they are nice and thorough.

We have used their energy, birds, and ecosystem curriculum and enjoyed them all.

Homeschool for The Boy is more stressful for me these days because he will be a senior next year and I feel like I have taught him nothing this school year.

For him it’s English where I feel like I have really dropped the ball. We have bailed on almost every book we have started this year because it has either been too wordy, too old-fashioned, or just didn’t hold our attention. That will change next week because I have decided we are starting A Tale of Two Cities and plowing through the difficult beginning and flowery writing to get to the story.

That way I can at least feel like I have exposed him to some more classic writers.

We have already read books by George Eliott, J.R.R. Tolkien, Stephen Crane, William Golding, and Mark Twain.

I hope before I am done with him (so to speak) we will read books by Dickens, Steinbeck, and maybe George Orwell. I’d really like to add Austen in there as well but we will see. We will be starting, or re-starting, A Tale of Two Cities next week.

For history I decided to purchase a book called A History of the Twentieth Century by Martin Gilbert. This has a comprehensive list of facts that will provide us a look at history that we can then use to jump off from with videos and further study.

The Boy will be a senior next year as I just mentioned and I’m having a hard time wrapping  my mind around it. He’s already checked out of schoolwork pretty much but I’m not ready to let him go. How is it possible he will be 18 in November? The thought has me weepy beyond belief these days. How does the time go by so fast? I should probably stop thinking about it or my computer screen is going to be soaked with my tears in a moment.

This is totally a topic shift again, but do you ever find yourself without a pen and paper or your phone and you have to remember something for like, say, your grocery list and you keep repeating what you need to add to the list because you’re afraid you’ll forget it?

Well, I have because for about half an hour this morning, I found myself repeating “maple syrup and hot dog buns” as I did other tasks around the house. I didn’t have my phone next to me to add it to my Instacart list.

I finally added it to my list but now I’m still singing “maple syrup and hot dog buns” to myself.

What I should probably add to that list is mouse traps, but I am hoping our hunter cats will finally get all the mice out of our house this week. A few months ago Scout (our youngest) had a mouse pinned in our heating vent but never got to it. This weekend The Boy reported a mouse ran across his feet while he was playing a video game because both cats were chasing it. He then watched them double up on this mouse with one of them hiding under the couch to scare it and the other one waiting at the end to grab it. Then they batted the thing around for a while and apparently lost it because they were more interested in toying with it.

Sunday we left them in the house together while we went to visit my parents and when we came back I joked with them that they had better have caught that mouse. I was saying all this while I was reaching for the light. It was dark in the kitchen and when I felt something squish under my boot while joking, I thought, “Oh, Lord, let that be a grape we dropped earlier in the week.”

It was not a grape and I was very glad I hadn’t kicked my boots off yet because it was indeed a dead mouse and my foot on it made sure it was even more dead – let’s just leave it at that.

That wasn’t the end of the story though, because yesterday Scout was chasing another mouse and it came running toward me, resulting in a lot of screaming from me because I didn’t want it to scamper across my bare feet like it had my son’s the other day.

I can’t believe it but the intrepid huntress lost this mouse too and as far as I know it is now hiding under our stove and The Husband has declared he’s searching the house this weekend to “find where these creatures are coming from.”

As I write this, the sun is pouring in our windows and the temperature outside is the warmest it has been in a week, but still at a chilly 40 degrees.

I’ll be lighting the fire before I get ready to take Little Miss to Awana at a church 20 minutes away to try to stretch what wood we have left into March, since Pennsylvania doesn’t believe in early springs no matter what the groundhog says.

So how is your week going so far?

I hope it is going well.

Let me know in the comments, even if it isn’t going well.


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9 thoughts on “Mid Week Catch Up: The weather, homeschool update, books, and other ramblings

  1. Pingback: Sunday Bookends: Relaxing in front of the fire, middle grade books, disappointing mystery books – Boondock Ramblings

  2. Your method of remembering the items you need reminded me I used to do something similar about 2 decades ago. My mom used to send me to the market to pick up things now and then. Once she sent my sister and me to get “green lettuce and big poppy,” the latter being a big thing of poppy seeds. Repetition is certainly helpful! Though I wish I didn’t still remember that 20 years later. And I wish that trick still worked because, sadly, I constantly have neither anything to note it down with nor the ability to remember anything even with repetition. On the bright side, our week started with everyone getting sick followed by a massive amount of rain coming through, so things can only get better, right? I hope you get some warmer temperatures soon!

    Liked by 2 people

    • Oh no! I hope you are all on the mend now or soon and that the rain leaves very soon. I believe I have read that your area is really getting hit hard!

      It’s so funny you remember that 20 years later. Have you ever seen the Sesame Street clip with the little boy who has to go to the store and he keeps repeating “a carton of milk, …something else (I forget what) and a stick of butter”? I still remember that to this day but not all of it clearly.

      Liked by 1 person

      • Thankfully we’re all much better, but we’re in for more rain this weekend. It’s certainly not as much rain as last year, but it’s definitely wrecking havoc. Though I’ve read that most of the country has been dealing with odd weather, as your area can probably attest to!

        In theory I should know that Sesame Street clip. My mom said I used to watch that show for 4 hours every day. But I guess I never repeated it aloud because I don’t remember doing that at all. But it’s a smart way of remembering things!

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  3. I think your son picking up some Pepsi is so heartwarming. He must have had the best of relationships with your Aunt Dianne. As far as teaching science, I really really disliked teaching it from a book. When I could do real life things, it was so much better. Do you have a set of standards for each subject? We had a blast teaching the scientific method and pulled in life cycles along with it. I can send you some of that information if you need it. History is one of those things where I used lots of historical fiction as well. I also tried to tell the history in terms of a story if that makes sense. I forget how old Little Miss is or what you have to teach in terms of History. I know of some wonderful historical fiction books for fourth grade but could also work for you since there are just the two of you. Have you explored books like The Odyssey or The Inferno for The Boy? I personally love them both, but they might appeal to a male since they’re more male-centric.

    We painted the last bedroom in the house this week and now have only the primary bathroom. I find myself colder than usual even though it’s warmer outside. I am ready for 75 degree days!

    https://marshainthemiddle.com/

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    • Little Miss is 9 (third grade) and eats up the historical fiction. We do have guidelines for each subject but they aren’t specific like “learn this specific topic by this or that time.”

      I would love any help with science!

      As for what we have to teach in history, the law doesn’t specify exactly other than we do, at some point in elementary school, have to teach Pennsylvania history, which I do a couple of times each year.

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  4. I found I stressed so much over high school and what to teach and often felt like reading and writing were our biggest failures since my boy (well both of them really!) hate reading and writing and yet my oldest has made the dean’s list nearly every semester in college so I must have done something right! I plan to have my youngest start taking just one course or so each semester his junior and senior year of high school so he has some idea of what college work will be like and so I can help go over thing like writing a term paper once again when he sees where it will actually matter.

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