1.23.2014

What does one do in below zero weather for entertainment?  Turn water into snow!!! Totally fun....try it if you get then chance.  Sorry the video is sideways. 

1.18.2014

One of God's Great Gifts

My Cari is growing into quite the beautiful young woman.  She is incredibly talented and full of life.  I enjoy her company and her interests. She challenges me and makes me laugh. God has truly blessed me with a daughter...I treasure her with all of my heart. Thank you, Lord. 

3.03.2010

Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring

Michael is working on a piano piece by Johann Sebastian Bach. It is Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring. It will be beautiful when he is done being diligent and putting in all of the hard work. Feel free to click on a very nice example of the piece:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c1wP_kU78gI&feature=related

4.23.2009

Poetry

I cannot post the photos of our fossils right now...so...I will post about poetry. Several weeks ago, we spent some time on limericks. They are so much fun!

They follow the poetry pattern of:
A
A
B
B
A


There once was a funny clown

He made a funny frown

He climbed up a tree
Then bumped into me
Thank heavens! I rolled into town!

Cari


There once was a hairy sheep

Who loves to party and sleep
His mama said no
So he could not go

And now no fun will he reap!

John-John

4.10.2009

Fossil Hunting

We have been on a fossil hunting kick lately. Probably because of the nice weather we have been experiencing by traveling a little further south that South Bend. We traveled to Missouri at the end of March for the National Homeschool Basketball Championship and went fossil hunting there. Since we returned, we have traveled back and forth to Muncie, IN a couple of times. While down here we took some of our friends to Richmond, IN for an afternoon of fossil hunting. The Richmond site has abundant fossils and is encouraging for those newcomers to fossil finding expeditions. We leave Muncie today, and head to Pennsylvania for Easter with John's family. No fossil hunting there. We do hope to get some decent photographs though. When we return it is my hope to clean up our specimans and see if I can get some good photographs of them. Then we would like to post them on this site. We really collected some great ones...so...I hope the photos will do them justice. Keep checking back.

2.26.2009

Homeschool Basketball

We have all been very busy enjoying athletics this winter...specifically BASKETBALL! This has provided many opportunities for us all to grow not only physically but emotionally and spiritually as well. There have been many "character-building moments". I praise God for that. He always amazes me...how He can take any activity and turn it into growth if we choose to have a soft and open heart.

Please feel free to pray for our team members that will be traveling to the National Homeschool Basketball Tournament in Springfield, MO the week of March 15th. I, personally, will travel with my family alone because my hubby has to stay and work.

2.19.2009

New Beginnings

Well, we started this blog so that our friends and family could follow us on our Alaskan Adventure. That was an incredible opportunity and experience. But, I have decided that we will continue our blogging journey...documenting the common things in our creative homeschool. I pray that I will be faithful and others will be encouraged and blessed by my efforts. So, the journey begins...

2.19.2008

Empty Plates...

Here is a proud Grandpa Tansy with our friends, Gabriel and Nathaniel. Notice the empty plates!!!! If you ever get to Healy, Alaska to Rosey's see if you can find their pictures on the wall. Congrats(I think?!) to them and Johnny for their gluttonous accomplishment!! On the way to Healy, we saw 3 moose (one was a baby). Yeah! It was very cool!
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The "Grizzly Burger"!!!

Here is Michael attempting to eat a 'Grizzly Burger". It is a one pound hamburger with and egg, slab of ham and all the fixings! If you can eat it....they will take your picture and put it on the wall of the restraunt. Michael gave it a great try, but but couldn't quite finish - actually, he made himself sick! That is a big burger! Nice try Super!
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7.18.2007

Concrete is Done! Yeah!



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We are done! Yeah! The boys have worked so hard and learned so much. I think all we have left to do is painting. It is a good thing because we leave in two days. Thank you for all of your prayers and thoughts. There has been plenty of opportunity to be injured and the hospitals are hours away! Thanks again.


We are back to laying concrete. John-John spent all day lifting 94lb. bags of cement mix up that ladder along with many other jobs as well. I captured this picture of him collapsing for a very short nap on the pallet of cement bags! Poor guy... he has worked so hard. They have to mix their own concrete because the cost of someone else mixing the concrete and bringing 2hrs. is too cost inhibiting.
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Grizzly Sighting


Cari is acting scared by this small stuffed Grizzly Bear - some get as tall as 12ft. tall! This is the way to see a Grizzly up close and personal! This restaurant had many other stuffed animals - bison, porcupine, linx, king crab (15 lb.), and black bears. This was a fun experience.
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Chapel on the Hill

This is the oldest log chapel in the Copper River Basin -Chapel on the Hill. Vincent J. Joy and his family came to Copper Center in May of 1937. This was the first contact with the gospel message that this area had - Athabascan natives, white settlers and lonely GI's. Grandma Tansy remembers the first men that were saved...she said they were really nasty characters - and that it was so evident that their lives were changed dramatically. Praise the Lord! It was the testimony of these men that had such a huge contact on this area. What amazes me is that my friends lives and the lives of their children and grandchildren were impacted for eternity because of this family and their committment to endure the harsh frontier. Besides preaching the gospel...he found himself serving as a medic, mortician, mechanic, musician and army chaplin. The Joys' founded the mission of SEND International of Alaska.
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Moose!


Here they are - moose!! Finally, you had to endure pictures of moose tracks and moose poop, now you get to see that they really do exist in Alaska! Cari and I were traveling from Fairbanks to Copper Center when we happened upon 3 adult moose and 1 baby. It was quite the sight! Pictures can not even begin to describe how incredible this was. God was so good to allow us one more peek into his creation! Unfortunately, the boys were not with us - they went back to Cantwell to continue working on the concrete.
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-50 Below Zero


We survived -50 degrees F. below zero!!!!! Some even survived with no coats - obviously not for long though. We had the opportunity to go into a freezer to experience what a winter in like in Fairbanks, Alaska. They threw a glass of hot water into the air and it evaporated into snow immediately. We hammered a nail in with a banana that was so frozen that it was as hard as a hammer! Some of sat in an ice chair...talk about cold! This was a fun, unique experience. I survived as well - I am the one taking the picture.
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Bears Keep Out!

This is called little building on stilts is called a cache ("kash").
They would put their food in these elevated cabins to keep it away from bears and other wildlife.
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Totem Pole

Back up to Fairbanks... this time we had the opportunity to go to Pioneer Park. This is a great place with several museums, older buildings that have been moved there and lots to see! Cari and Michael are outside of a Native American museum (fascinating).
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7.15.2007


Michael caught this picture of two ravens. It is awesome! Click on the picture if you want to see it larger. The ravens are huge and spooky when they squawk. I told you before that Grandma Tansy belongs to the Tlingit tribe. The tribe is split into two clans - the raven and the eagle. Our friends are ravens. They have so many interesting customs and stories. The Tlingits are a southeast Alaska tribe - near the shore. She grew up in a fishing village and ate things like "stink eggs" (salmon eggs put in a jar and buried outside for days) and "stink heads" - salmon heads that are put in a gunny sack and anchored in the water for the tide to go in and out - then they eat it! She said she liked the eggs but didn't really care for the heads!
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The whole gang is working really hard to try to get this concrete done before we leave. Because of the short summers up here, there is a short window of opportunity to lay concrete. Also, it has taken 3 trips back and forth to Fairbanks (6 hr. round trip) just to get the amount of concrete we need for the job. Pray that we will have the strength, good weather and thing would run smoothly. We have less than one week left to get the job done.
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Much to learn

Grandma Tansy is teaching Cari and all the other kids how to make cinnamon rolls.
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