Saturday Afternoon Chat: A brief homeschool update, I broke my book-buying ban….again, and Ilia Milanin is just – wow!

This homeschool year has been different than the past nine years I have been homeschooling.

One, I’m only homeschooling one child this year. Of course, I was only homeschooling one child for a year or so before I moved Little Miss into official lessons when she was about 5.

But this year, my oldest has already graduated.

Little  Miss is in fifth grade, and this year we added online classes to the lessons we were doing from our physical textbooks.

We were already using online videos/curriculum for math, but this year we found Outschool and began to add art classes, two science classes, and three clubs where Little Miss can interact with other students and an instructor.

Little Miss absolutely loves the art classes. We will not be giving them up anytime soon.

She also enjoys the other classes — even the science, which I thought she might want to give up over the summer, but doesn’t want to.

She actually wants to continue all of her classes this summer, so we are becoming semi-all-year-round homeschoolers.

Doing that would actually be great because it means we can take breaks whenever we want and still hit our required 180 days of school under the Pennsylvania homeschool law.

In addition to the online classes, we recently enrolled Little Miss in art classes once a week about a 45-minute drive from our house.

She’s really enjoying this.

Mixed with online and in-person classes is the curriculum-based work we do.

This year we are using Beautiful Feet’s literature-based history curriculum, Evan Moore worksheets for grammar, punctuation, and spelling, and The Good and the Beautiful for science unit studies.

We have read The Singing Tree by Kate Seredy this year and excerpts from a fiction book about the Civil War.

The Singing Tree focuses on World War I from the perspective of Hungarian-Austrian farmers.

We usually read more books throughout the year. I’m not really sure what happened to us this year but since we are continuing to homeschool during the summer (at least part time anyhow), we have plenty of time to dig into another one.

We meet with our homeschool evaluator in the beginning of June, but before that I have to give Little Miss a standardized test online, which is required in Pennsylvania for third, fifth, and eighth grades.

Yesterday, Little Miss, The Husband, and I stopped at a book sale at a library in the town where Little Miss takes her classes.

That visit resulted in me breaking my book-buying ban for March and April. I am, however, going to try to restart the ban on April 1—no fooling!

I did not institute a ban on myself because I think it is bad to own books but because I have plenty I want to read and I’d like to get through those before I buy anymore.

There was a nice selection at the sale this year but I stuck to authors I knew, for the most part, and even bought two books I already own.

They were both Jan Karon books. One of them is a paperback version of a huge hardback collection I own, and I thought it would be nice to have a “lighter” version of that one.

Of course, Little Miss needed to pick out a couple of cozy mysteries for me, a tradition when we visit this sale. I was very excited she picked up Cat Who book I haven’t read yet and then I found another one I hadn’t read yet as well.

The Husband found three books I might read after him, including a Raymond Chandler one, The Big Sleep.

Here is my stack, without The Husband’s books:



The only problem is finding places to put these books we keep buying. Luckily, I have a plan to rehome the ones I have read and don’t think I will read again. That went very well last time when I put them all in a bag for my husband to distribute to the many free little libraries he drives past. Sarcasm alert because both he and I forgot about the books and I’m fairly certain they are still sitting in the trunk of my car.

I’ll keep trying to find homes for these little guys.

The weather has been so crazy for the past month, but the last two weeks have taken the cake. One day it is 70, the next 32 and so on. My sinuses are miserable from it all. Today the high is going to be 34 and I won’t be doing much other than taking some groceries to my parents.

This upcoming week shouldn’t be busy at the beginning of the week, but definitely will be after Thursday, which is when my husband is having dental surgery. I’m not looking forward to that day because we have to get up so early and because I am just nervous about the procedure itself. We aren’t sure how he will be feeling afterwards but he is calling Monday to get more details.

Completely off topic but I just watched Ilia Malinin win his third World Figure Skating Championship and fell into a YouTube spiral of watching his videos afteward.

I’ve never seen anyone skate the way he does, pulling off those quad axels and jumps like he’s just skating along on a frozen pond somewhere. It’s like nothing for him. Of course, I know it has taken years of practice, discipline, and work to get there but it just feels like it’s nothing for him.

The height he gets on those jumps is like nothing I have ever seen before. I’ve been watching skating for more than 30 years and I definitely have my favorites from way back. Some were stronger in artistry and some in technical skills but they were so entertaining either way. With Ilia you have someone who is strong in every aspect of skating. He is outstanding technically but also artistically.

When he does those jumps it is almost other worldly — beyond human capability.

In case you haven’t seen him yet, here is his program from today’s World Championships and a then video that shows you how amazing his quad jumps are.

How have things been going for you? Anything interesting going on or going to go on?

The week in review, books, shows and looking at new beginnings

Here is a little week in review and a little of what I was reading, watching and doing this past week. You can follow some other updates on the Sunday Salon on Readerbuzz and The Caffeinated Book Reviewer.

This week is a week of saying goodbye to the old and looking forward to new beginnings. My husband is leaving his job after 16 years there and has taken a new job about 40 minutes away. This is his last week at the old job. Eventually, we will move closer to his job since it is also closer to my parents who are growing older. I met my husband while we were both working in newspapers. My degree is in journalism and I spent 14 years working at small-town newspapers before walking away to stay home with my kid, first, and then kids later.

When I left newspapers, he was my boss and the editor of the daily (six days a week) paper we worked at and that’s where he’s been ever since. In two weeks he will become the editor of the small weekly paper where I got my start writing my high school news column. It’s also where I worked for nine months when I did the newspaper hop, bouncing between the two main county papers before going to work for a slightly larger paper in New York State where everyone hated me, and then back to the paper where my husband worked, staying there until I “retired” so to speak.

Speaking of people hating me . . .(well, maybe, and hopefully not, but possibly):

I didn’t mean to say goodbye to a friend this week but the writing has been on the wall for a while so when I was pushed to answer why I wasn’t fully answering texts I gave an answer. The answer wasn’t appreciated.  The ending of the friendship won’t be too much of a change since we’d only seen each other once in eight months but it could create some awkward moments since our boys are still friends. In the last two years, I’ve become the queen of awkward moments so it won’t be anything new for me.

As for what I’m reading and watching this week:

The Hairy Bikers was on my watching list part of the week. They have a couple shows on Netflix but the kids and I enjoyed watching them learn about all things chicken on their show: The Hairy Biker’s Chicken & Egg. This series shows them traveling the world to learn more about how versatile the chicken really is – thanks to the many ways to cook its meat and its eggs. They showcase some recipes, introduce the viewers to some amazing chicken-based dishes, all while being slightly odd and hilarious. If you haven’t seen the show, they are two British bikers (motorcycle riding dudes) who are also chefs. So they are refined in their tastes and delightfully less refined in their personalities, which is a perfect combination for me.

hairy bikers

According to their site, they’ll be debuting a show in the UK sometime later this year featuring their tour of Route 66 in the US. I’m not sure when, or if, that will debut here in the US but I’d be interested to see it.

On the book front, I’m finishing up the fifth Mitford book, which I talked about last week, and then I’m starting (or at least hoping to) the following books:

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Quite an eclectic group of books but it’s a combination of books my brother suggested and my reading obsessed husband ordered me to – I mean suggested – I read.

I also finished a couple books this week:

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And

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The Green Ember is a young adult book about medieval, sentient, anamorphic rabbits avenging the loss of their past king, finding their future king and working toward a kingdom of peace. It sounds weird but it really was engaging. Wish me luck, I have to lead a middle school book discussion on it for our homeschooling group next week.

So how about all of you? Any new beginnings you’re starting? Any friendships you’ve ended (I hope not!)? What are you reading or watching these days? Let me know in the comments if you so desire.