I had two presents on my wish list this year...a sewing machine and a garmin running watch. For mother's day, I got the sewing machine! It was the perfect mothers day present because it was something I wanted to do with my little girl! Isabella has been begging to sew. Our first sewing project was a few months back (pre-sewing machine era) and included a felt scarf for her beanie boo and a tiny felt stuffed animal for Olivia. I think it was a black and white zebra! It was cute.
So we broke out the sewing machine this week.
A Brother CS6000
(Yes mother's day was about 2 months ago.) My mom helped us set it up...but since it was a new model and therefore different from her machine that she bought in high school, we had to go to the internet.
I have discovered that if there is ever something that you don't know how to do..there is a you tube video out there that will show you how! That's how I learned to knit! Now..that's how we learned to set up the sewing machine! It's pretty amazing!
So..I wanted to start with making cloth napkins but Isabella really wanted to make an owl pillow. We had purchased some fat quarters a few weeks ago. She had picked out all of the fabrics, so there were pretty crazy bright prints. I figured that those eye-blinding fabrics might make for some unappetizing table napkins so I conceded.
We went to the internet again for owl pillow inspiration. We drew a pattern on paper and then cut out our fabric.
We chose a plain stitch. And worked on sewing our first piece together. It was the first time either of us had used a sewing machine. Things/ideas changed as we started to put it together. What started as the ears turned into wings. What started as wings turned into feet.
Isabella made all of the fabric choices and pattern making. She sewed the body together and stuffed the entire thing herself. She sewed the eye pieces together and I sewed them on the owl.
Pretty great for a 6 year old!!!!
So here is the final project! She was giddy with pride!!!! Seriously!
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Monday, July 2, 2012
Gardening with Kids!
This week was full of outdoor activities...and then 105 degree heat!
Before it got hot..the kids made sidewalk paint and I put them to work painting the garden! We used a recipe that I found online that was simply:
1 cup of cornstarch
1 cup of water
food coloring
Very easy and fun! They mixed their paint in a mixing bowl, poured it in the muffin tin and then added the food coloring. I gave them a purpose and said that they could paint anything in the garden! They had a lot of fun mixing colors. They even ran to Otto's house to get more corn starch and food coloring when they ran out!
Look at all of the pretty colors you can mix from just red, blue, yellow and green food coloring!
How fun is this watermelon!! I can't wait till the kids get to eat it!
There's my broccoli bite! You can also see my homemade bamboo stakes..using some of the jungle of bamboo from my backyard!
Before it got hot..the kids made sidewalk paint and I put them to work painting the garden! We used a recipe that I found online that was simply:
1 cup of cornstarch
1 cup of water
food coloring
Very easy and fun! They mixed their paint in a mixing bowl, poured it in the muffin tin and then added the food coloring. I gave them a purpose and said that they could paint anything in the garden! They had a lot of fun mixing colors. They even ran to Otto's house to get more corn starch and food coloring when they ran out!
Look at all of the pretty colors you can mix from just red, blue, yellow and green food coloring!
Artists in the garden
Painting the trellis!
This year may be one of my best gardens yet! Although my broccoli turned out wimpy and not worth anything, I have the most variety of veggies ever! This year I planted:
bibb lettuce (a bit strong in flavor)
brocolli (as you can see from the photo, I had enough for one bite!)
tomato plants (not yet ready)
sweet potatoes (don't know when they'll be ready)
habeneros (looking a bit stunty)
fennel (isabella planted for the butterflies..it looks great!)
sunflowers (very pretty)
peas (it got too hot and only 1 came up)
and an unexpected Watermelon! (I think somehow a seed got spat into one of my pots. I transplanted it in the garden not knowing exactly what it was! It's beautiful)
So after all that..my garden doesn't sound too successful, but at least it looks pretty!
There's my broccoli bite! You can also see my homemade bamboo stakes..using some of the jungle of bamboo from my backyard!
My painters at work!
Friday, June 29, 2012
Summer Time Week....?
I'm falling behind on my weekly posts...Week 3/Week 4? I dunno! I've lost track! This is the part of summer where I start to forget what day it is! It is so nice!
This past week was another fun filled/busy week! We visited the zoo and saw IRONMAN! That was the highlight of Saturday! Sunday was father's day which was spent at a Dance Recital and with family.
We will start there!
It was also our last week on Wee Rock, which is a baby/toddler music class with Miss Heidi!
Zachary's sundial..can you tell what time it is?
Jeffersonville Aquatic Center
Isabella's Spring Dance Recital
This hat looks yummy!
This past week was another fun filled/busy week! We visited the zoo and saw IRONMAN! That was the highlight of Saturday! Sunday was father's day which was spent at a Dance Recital and with family.
We will start there!
Vincent is helping Pop put up posts on the deck.
Zachary's sundial..can you tell what time it is?
Jeffersonville Aquatic Center
Fun in the shade!
Isabella's Spring Dance Recital
This hat looks yummy!
Our Anniversary card from Isabella....so cute!
Friday, June 15, 2012
Jump Rope Turns and Touches!
This video deserves a piece about perseverance! This girl just picked up the jump rope on Thursday and by Friday she is doing turns and touches. She said it took "22 takes" but it might have been more than that. We practiced for over an hour on Friday until we could get it right! We also had fun writing our own jump rope songs. Poor Dad was worn out from taking video after video, but she wouldn't quit until we made it all the way through the song without stopping! That's why you see her collapse at the end. She was worn out!!
Thursday, June 14, 2012
54 degrees
After working all night at the church picnic, we woke up ready to go camping! But where? There were a couple of places we had in mind but we settled on Mammoth Cave National Park. We packed up in about 2 hours, so of course when we arrived we were running to the camp store every 15 minutes to pick up something we had forgotten...butter, mustard, aluminum foil, grill tools. I need to make a printable list of everything we need to take for future use!
So, back to Mammoth Cave. The campsites and bathrooms were the nicest of all other parks in Kentucky. The sites were spacious (we could have easily fit 3 tents) and very clean. The bathrooms were clean as well. It also wasn't over crowded and there was plenty of shade.
We got there Saturday afternoon and set up camp. We couldn't get any tickets for cave tours because they were all sold out, so we went on a ranger-led nature walk instead. It was a short hike and we were the only ones. We got a personal tour. The ranger led us down to Echo cave which is an underground cave full of water. Water bubbles up from the cave and flows to the Green river, which is only about 1/4 mile away. She taught us about poison ivy and said we could walk down to the cave if we wanted. The water coming up from the cave was 54 degrees...or freezing cold! The kids played around in the water and on the sandy, sandy bank!
Riding Mommy's back on the trail.
That night we cooked dinner over the flames and realized we had forgotten forks and knives so it was a bit difficult to eat our steak. We felt like real hunter-gathers eating steak with our hands! We cooked the baked potatoes right in the flames and they turned out great too!
The next morning we arrived at the visitors center at 8 am when it opened and got our cave tour tickets. We took the "Frozen Niagara" tour and the "Mammoth passage" tour. Both are rated as "easy" for people with small children.
The Frozen Niagara tour was great because we learned a lot about cave geology. We learned about stalactites, stalagmites, and the kids favorites "popcorn", "grapes", and "bacon". There were some tight passages, some ducking, and some stairs that the kids found frightening (mostly Zach)..but we made it down.
Because of the white-nose bat disease, they make you walk across a soapy Lysol and water mat when you come off out of the tours. This is supposed to prevent you from carrying the fungus that causes the white-nose disease into other caves. They don't know if Mammoth Cave has the bat disease, but they don't want it to spread before they find it, so they use this preventative measure.
After this tour we drove around the park. We took both ferry's across the green river and inadvertently drove to Nolin Lake for lunch. We were trying to find Houchens ferry road, so we could check out the other campground, but we got lost and ran into Nolin lake. We found it's very close by! At Nolin, we ate lunch at a stinky picnic area and then learned how to skip rocks at the marina. We checked out the campground there. It wasn't nearly as shaded at Mammoth Cave...more like full sun!
We eventually found Houchen's ferry road. It is a long gravel road that ends at the green river. You take a ferry across the river and the campground is right on the river. No water or bathrooms though!
After our drive, we took the Mammoth Passage tour into the dry part of the cave with large rooms. This tour was more about the history of the cave. Zachary enjoyed hearing the stories of the early woodland people over 2000 years ago and about how Mammoth Cave helped the US win the French and Indian War thanks to the salt petre that was found there.
Olivia in the cave..she slept most of the 2nd tour.
Overall, we had a great trip! Olivia slept through the night both nights! Some people might think we are crazy to camp with a 3 month old, but really it wasn't hard. It was easier than a trip to the zoo where the crowd can make it really hard to keep up with 4 kids. I slept like a dream on the REI inflatable camp mat...we are going to have to get another one of those! It was literally like sleeping in our own beds!
Jambalaya with Sausage...it looks like Vincent is crying here but he isn't! He's just begging for more!
So, back to Mammoth Cave. The campsites and bathrooms were the nicest of all other parks in Kentucky. The sites were spacious (we could have easily fit 3 tents) and very clean. The bathrooms were clean as well. It also wasn't over crowded and there was plenty of shade.
Setting up the Tent!
We got there Saturday afternoon and set up camp. We couldn't get any tickets for cave tours because they were all sold out, so we went on a ranger-led nature walk instead. It was a short hike and we were the only ones. We got a personal tour. The ranger led us down to Echo cave which is an underground cave full of water. Water bubbles up from the cave and flows to the Green river, which is only about 1/4 mile away. She taught us about poison ivy and said we could walk down to the cave if we wanted. The water coming up from the cave was 54 degrees...or freezing cold! The kids played around in the water and on the sandy, sandy bank!
Those toes have got to be freezing!
Riding Mommy's back on the trail.
Down time at the Camp
Hanging out at the Camp
No Utensils? No Problem!
That night we cooked dinner over the flames and realized we had forgotten forks and knives so it was a bit difficult to eat our steak. We felt like real hunter-gathers eating steak with our hands! We cooked the baked potatoes right in the flames and they turned out great too!
The next morning we arrived at the visitors center at 8 am when it opened and got our cave tour tickets. We took the "Frozen Niagara" tour and the "Mammoth passage" tour. Both are rated as "easy" for people with small children.
The Frozen Niagara tour was great because we learned a lot about cave geology. We learned about stalactites, stalagmites, and the kids favorites "popcorn", "grapes", and "bacon". There were some tight passages, some ducking, and some stairs that the kids found frightening (mostly Zach)..but we made it down.
Bus Ride to Frozen Niagara
Because of the white-nose bat disease, they make you walk across a soapy Lysol and water mat when you come off out of the tours. This is supposed to prevent you from carrying the fungus that causes the white-nose disease into other caves. They don't know if Mammoth Cave has the bat disease, but they don't want it to spread before they find it, so they use this preventative measure.
After this tour we drove around the park. We took both ferry's across the green river and inadvertently drove to Nolin Lake for lunch. We were trying to find Houchens ferry road, so we could check out the other campground, but we got lost and ran into Nolin lake. We found it's very close by! At Nolin, we ate lunch at a stinky picnic area and then learned how to skip rocks at the marina. We checked out the campground there. It wasn't nearly as shaded at Mammoth Cave...more like full sun!
Skipping Rocks and Napping in the stroller!
We eventually found Houchen's ferry road. It is a long gravel road that ends at the green river. You take a ferry across the river and the campground is right on the river. No water or bathrooms though!
After our drive, we took the Mammoth Passage tour into the dry part of the cave with large rooms. This tour was more about the history of the cave. Zachary enjoyed hearing the stories of the early woodland people over 2000 years ago and about how Mammoth Cave helped the US win the French and Indian War thanks to the salt petre that was found there.
Olivia in the cave..she slept most of the 2nd tour.
Overall, we had a great trip! Olivia slept through the night both nights! Some people might think we are crazy to camp with a 3 month old, but really it wasn't hard. It was easier than a trip to the zoo where the crowd can make it really hard to keep up with 4 kids. I slept like a dream on the REI inflatable camp mat...we are going to have to get another one of those! It was literally like sleeping in our own beds!
Good Morning!
Look at that beautiful smile!
Jambalaya with Sausage...it looks like Vincent is crying here but he isn't! He's just begging for more!
When we woke up, we looked up on the tent and these were on the top!
Silly Kid Pics! Open umbrella in a car?
Turkey Sighting!!
Asleep on a hike!
The Main Entrance to Mammoth Cave.
Another great part of the National Parks is the Junior Ranger Program. They've made it a little easier to obtain. You used to have to attend a certain number of ranger programs and do outdoor activities. That wasn't usually feasible if you were only in the park one day or not camping. Now kids earn a certain number of points (based on how many activity pages they do). Activity pages include puzzles/park trivia. It's a bit easier, but the book itself is more entertaining for the kids.
We can't wait to go back, especially when the kids are older and we can do more difficult tours and maybe even take a canoe/kayak trip down Green River. It really was a neat place and a great place to camp. Hopefully this will be just one of our fun camping adventures this summer.
@@If some of these pictures are blurry, it is because my good camera died half way through the trip and I had to use my camera phone.
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