Wednesday, April 29, 2009

April 29

our day started with the company of a friend for a little while.that's always nice.

we began our soil investigation experiment.

and read Ms. Frizzle's Adventures Ancient Egypt.
which was totally cool
because we got to talk more about air current
and soil conditions
and that the pyramids were made out of Mudstone (related to yesterday's carbonate discussion)
and how energy is made from power derived from damming water just as it is from windmills
and how the pyramid stones were drug on ramps (the Egyptians didn't have the wheel yet)...
...which led to something I had planned to share with them today about physics...

Trev tried to life a large stone up onto the chair...
but of course it's way too heavy.
we made a ramp with a board.success!
takes a bit more time, but definitely easier than lifting!

cool how the Egyptians took out the earth ramps after the pyramids were finished.
just there for a tool.

Maddie practiced using a lever to move the big stone.she decided she's really good at it.

Spore

pick-up-sticks

and then off for an adventure with the utah urban homesteaders to our local historic farm

home again home again
jiggety jig

where we checked to see what beauties there were to be found at the bottom of our jar.
one little tiny millipede-looking thing.
i think tomorrow we'll dig in the compost and see what we come up with!

Maddie's asleep, Daddy's home, Trev's on the computer, and i'm ready for my book. :)
we'll see you tomorrow.

Soil Investigation

How exciting to find instructions for investigating the tiny organisms living in our soil!

Here's how it's done.

You'll need these(a funnel, wire, a small piece of wire screen, something to cut your wire, a mason jar, and soil)

and to do this

make sure you don't have any worms in you soil, or anything too big to escape through the screen.




Leave the jar under the lamp for several hours, or overnight.
While under the lamp the soil will dry and heat up, and the organisms inside the soil will burrow down to escape the heat, and land at the bottom of the jar.

After studying the tiny creatures, be sure to return them to your garden!


This one, too, came from our latest favorite, Barron's Science Wizardry For Kids.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

April 28

We started off "just right" today, with a stack of library books.
Bunnies, penguins, elephants, crickets, and tracks of ornithopods and therapods.
A fine beginning.


We made rain!
And talked about that dewpoint means the point of when water vapor condenses into liquid, forming rain drops.
A very cool experiment -
boil a big pot of water,
place a bunch of ice in a little pot (with a tiny bit of water if your ice is dry)
hold the little pot over the boiling pot,
and watch the water vapor condense on your little pot,
and then fall as does the rain!Cool.
Simple, but still cool.

And we discovered how wings work - with wind currents.
-Get a piece of paper, and fold it toward you--but stop when you're an inch away from the edge.
Make your fold here.
Bring the bottom edges together, and place a piece of tape on both ends.Loop a 20 inch or so piece of string through the bend in your paper,
and tie both ends to a long dowel or yardstick.Swing the stick from side to side to see the way the wind catches under the wing, an makes it rise.
"The air going over the curved top of the paper trvels faster than the air under the paper. The faster-moving air exerts less pressure than the air moving under the iwng. The greater pressure on the bottom surface keeps the wing up in the air." *
When we were doing this, the wind kicked up, and we didn't have to sway the stick.
"Look, Bud, it's flying!"
"Big deal, the wind is blowing it!" He said, not sure what my point was.
"Exactly my point! The wind current has caught it, and it propels it up! Just like it does for birds."

Dinosaur World. (a long-time favorite.)

Worms.
Daydreaming.

We looked at frost crystals under the microscope. Funny that though they are so terribly small, they are still six-sided crystals.
- We put a slide in the freezer for a minute, then hunted down something in the freezer that had frost on it.Even watching it melt is pretty cool.

Then we watched a living ant under it.Had a bit of "It's my turn!!" over that one. :)

Painting.
One of us mowed the lawn (er, and had to get a plastic bag for a couple of presents left by Annabelle-- so we got to again talk about wind currents and things being lifted up into and over the current)
while another talked the ear off a neighbor about Prehistory
and the other turned up stones lining the flower beds looking for more little friends.
I was grinning over the fact that I could hear the conversation (due to the quiet of the push-mower) but that I was excluded from the over-the-fence conversation as I was Otherwise Occupied.
That boy does love a new audience for his lectures.

A new (for us) dinosaur website. (Kind of basic, but acceptable because you can create and mutate your own species. Gotta love that.)

Into the sunshine!A break in the clouds for an hour or two or four made for some warm outside play.
And play and play and play.

Fossil footprints.
- Take two pie pans.
Fill them both about half way full of fine sand - about 1 1/2 inch deep.
Pour some water into the first pan, mixing the sand with the water-- to the consistency you would want for a sand castle.
Smooth it out evenly and make your impression.
For the second pan, if you have 1/2 cup of water left in the picture (that should do it), add about 1/3 cup of Epsom Salts to it, and stir the water to dissolve the salts. This is the "cementing solution".
Pour it into your (dry) sand, mix it well, and then spread the sand evenly.
Make your hand or foot print. Or your dinosaur impression, if you insist.
After a few days of letting them bake in a warm and dry place, investigate the difference in the two impressions.

When water is mixed with the salts, the salts act as a kind of glue, holding the tiny granules of sand together.
Carbonates -such as calcium carbonate- found in nature act the same way. In nature, carbonate works to bond the grains to all the other grains of sand around it, making it Sandstone.
Carbonate cements mud particles together to make Mudstone.
Where carbonate fills up a whole layer on the bottom of a lake, it becomes Limestone.

Looks like the babes are wrapping things up with a bit more play with Blondie,
then we've plans to snuggle in on the couch with supper, a giant bowl of popcorn, and Dinotopia.

Prob'ly we'll see you tomorrow.



* A direct quote from the book "Barron's Science Wizardry for Kids".

The wing and the rain experiments came from the book "Barron's Science Wizardry for Kids".


The fossil experiment comes from the book "Dinosaur Tracks" by Kathleen Weidner Zoehfield.

Monday, April 27, 2009

April 27: Nothin'

Hmmm.

*total hesitation*

To blog, or not to blog?
I got nothin', friends.

Was two hours away from having my whole house sparkly this morning.
And found myself wiped out of energy.

Trev sat around looking forward to someone being done with school for the day.

I sat down to lunch with my book (always sit down to eat with My Book - whatever My Book may be in that moment).
And then settled in the couch a bit deeper.

Perhaps for A Bit Too Long, for I got sleepy.

Warned the children.... walked to the den where they were playing, "Uh, looks like I might have a nap. So I'm signing off. See you later."
"Okay, Mom. Have a nice nap."
That was easy.
Hmm. It's never been this easy before....
Still, I was confident.

Read, drift, loll...
I was pretty happily ensconced in that lovely "in between" place, when I thought I heard this little breathy noise.
Since I had a pillow over my head to protect my senses from the bright (and thoroughly decent) daylight, I dared to open one lid a millimeter or two.
What do I see, but an eyeball looking directly into mine, from the bottom of the pillow, about two inches from from my nose.
"Hi, Mom." says the one with the blue eyes.
"[Grunt] Sleepin'."
"Yeah... Can we go to the doughnut shoppe tomorrow?"
I think I laughed.
"Maybe. We'll see, Maddie."
"Thanks, Mom."

That was about it for the nap.
But, as fate would (so cruelly) have it... I still wasn't granted that "get it all done in two hours and feel so happy about this fabulously clean house you've gotten yourself" energy boost.

So the day drifted along pretty much dedicated to the same course.

Blondie came over.

I managed to make up a game or two for the babes to play on the tramp with her. Involved drawing on the tramp with sidewalk chalk.
And I got out the marshmallow guns.

Lots of computer play in between all of that... somewhere.

Oh, look.... Daddy's home!

Soon enough Blondie is called to dinner, and I realize it's my turn to figure out the same.

We decide what it's gonna be,
and that the day's highlight will be Popcorn-and-a-Movie.
Daddy is sent to the store-- with the babes enthusiastically (so enthusiastically!) tagging along to make sure he doesn't forget the popcorn, red vines, and milk duds.

And Mama is left in Peace and Quiet to right the day's post.
:)
And she's got nothin'......

Wall of Art

So mentioned a while back that we want to put to use our wide and very blank hall.

Lately it gets utilized well-ly and thoroughly, as we have two book shelves there now that house recent kitchen table projects and supplies.

A couple of days ago I saw a post that someone had made 8x10 "homemade clipboards". (Let me just say here, that if it was you, please let me know, as I've looked and looked for it so I can link, but I can't find it!)
Brilliant!, thought I.
Not that we have a need for more clipboards... but we do have this wall that I intend for Art and for family photos, but I don't have frames for each and every size and shape of project.
But a board....with a clothes pin for a clip.....


I ran to the craft store to get two large, heavy pieces of mat board (at least that's what I think it's called), some ribbon to match Maddie's board, ad some pretty wrapping paper.

For Maddie's I taped on the paper, and then wove ribbon (you could certainly use ric-rac for this, I just didn't have any that would match, and you'd need a lot of it) over the board, and hot-glued it to the back.
Trev's paper is taped on (onto the back), and then clothes pins are glued directly to the paper.
Tada!Love it.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

something... Boyful.... this way comes.

This weekend has been quite the Educating one.

We have -thanks to ASN (across the street neighbor... maybe we should call her Blondie hereafter)- discovered such things as

hilarious cat in a box videos,

some peanut butter and jelly song that my children are crazy about

Weird Al Yankovic

the song Another One Bites the Dust

that friends sometimes bite back

and... today... most auspiciously of all, perhaps...

that after living in this house for six years -six years!- with pretty much no neighborhood children (aside from Blondie, but I think her Mama wasn't too sure about "the naturalists" across the street.... uh, No, I don't mean we go not dressed)...


... We have discovered BOYS!

We have two boys around the corner, and within five houses.
A ninety second walk from our front gate.

Boys. Two of them.

I can't help but think...
Hallelujah!
Not only for the friend factor, but also, perhaps more importantly...
He now has someone else to tell his butt and burp jokes to.

Here we go, then.....

snapshot sunday





see sarah to play.