Monday, October 8, 2012

Fall To Do List




You really can't beat Buffalo, New York for Fall. I'm not a huge fan of fall. I get depressed about the end of summer... And the need to put a snow brush in my car. But one of the things I really want to do for Maddie is teach her to enjoy all the little occasions throughout life, including the passage of seasons.

So I'm putting together a Fall To Do List to remind myself of the things I do like about the season.

Fall To Do List:
  • Bake pumpkin-y things
  • Make thankful turkeys
  • Go to Beckers
  • Have a fondue dinner night
  • Make doughnuts
  • Go on a hay ride
  • Collect leaves
  • Decorate for fall
  • Go on a walk in Forest Lawn Cemetery
  • Have a football day with a football dinner
  • Carve a pumpkin
  • Roast pumpkin seeds
  • Go on a walk to the Japanese Gardens
  • Collect pinecones and acorns
  • Scuff through leaves and take a leaf shower
  • Watch the Wizard of Oz on Halloween
  • Dress up for Halloween
  • Watch Charlie Brown
  • Smash acorns!
  • Drink a Pumpkin Spice Latte
  • Go to Howl OWeen at the Zoo

    Now if I can just get Maddie to ditch her summer dresses. This child is a regular Zooey Deschanel. Embrace pants, my child!

  • Saturday, October 6, 2012

    Food Stamping

    A little food crafting for you all! Maddie and I did some old fashioned stamping using fruits and veggies.




    We used apples, lemons, celery, romaine lettuce and potatoes (cut into shapes.)




    I used the last of my salt to create this puffy paint (recipe here on Pinterest.)




    Maddie loved using the celery, which came out looking kind of like a rose.




    Even I learned a cool fact during this project. Did you know if you slice an apple around the middle you get a star shape?




    Truthfully, this was not the best paint for this project. It's actually "puffy paint" which didn't quite get all the texture of the stamps but looked really cool after it dried.




    Kind of cool, huh? This is getting a spot on my kitchen wall for now.

    Thursday, October 4, 2012

    Fighting Dirty

    Be prepared I'm going to write a personal blog, but I can do this because Rob doesn't actually read my blog. So ha!  Here we go...

    Our wedding, September 3, 2006. Photograph by Robert Knight of Knight Studio (LOVE, LOVE, LOVE Knight Studio!)

    Confession: Rob and I do not fight well. It's not that we fight a lot -- in fact, weve been together almost 13 years and we've rarely fought.  But when we do fight we are terrible at it!

    Once a long time ago, Rob rode the train home with a friend of mine and somehow confessed that he has a fight strategy. When I'm mad at him, he pretends to be mad at me. Then he admitted his secondary strategy is that when he knows he's done something that will make me mad, he cleans the house -- so that I will have to be happy about something.

    As for me, I'm a total wuss at fighting. I either get all weepy about the smallest thing (seriously, I cry at commercials, too) or I go all drama queen and pretend I'm more mad than I really am. Awful, right?

    We've certainly gotten better at fighting over the years! I even heard Rob apologize once or twice.  My whole purpose in writing this blog is simply because we are always growing as a couple. And that really hit home when I read this article (found through Pinterest -- shocker!)  

    This article is really inspirational in a way, and has such important information for everyone to remember. I hope you find it as useful as I do.

    Wednesday, October 3, 2012

    Our Senses: Part 1

    I recently mentioned how much Maddie and I love to watch Sid the Science Kid on PBSKids. This little science experiment is another Sid-inspired project.
    In one episode of Sid, the kids learned about their sense of smell. The teacher filled opaque cups with smelly items, covered them with paper punched with holes. The kids smelled the cups and recorded their guesses of what was inside by drawing a picture in their journals. After the big reveal, the kids drew a second picture of the revealed item.




    We tried this with lemon, cinnamon, onion, crayons, and Play-Doh.




    Very fancy, scientific set-up-- a mug, some construction paper and masking tape, and then stabbed with a fork. Totally set-up about 2 minutes!




    Maddie takes a deep sniff, nose to jar. Then we make some guesses.




    She really wanted to look and see, so unwrapping was her favorite part.
    A simple tweak to the experiment works for our sense of touch. We tried scraps of different materials all cut to the same size.




    Construction paper, felt, fur, sandpaper, egg carton, bubble wrap, aluminum foil, silk... Any textured material can be put in an old tissue box.




    I used a piece of black construction paper to help us from peeking.
    Then I told Maddie to reach in and grab something soft, something fluffy, something rough etc...




    We definitely learned that Maddie's favorite sense is sight! As a three-year-old, she's a little young for this, but that just means we do more lead up. Recently, and especially today, whenever I've used one of the items that would appear in the experiment, we've talked about their smells or textures. I even had her do a little smell test that she did really well with. During our experiment we asked questions like: "Do you think we use this in the kitchen or living room?" Or "what does this remind you of?"
    As always, it doesn't really matter if she gets the items right-- it's the process that's fun. And Maddie keeps calling our experiments, "the Science Museum."
    Stay tuned to see an experiment for each of the remaining three senses.