Strawberry Picking

We went strawberry picking the other day.  One of my favorite summer activities, which is funny because I remember hating it as a child.  You have to squat the whole time, being careful not to step on berries in the tight rows, sore legs, and aching back.  Maybe we stayed too long or I was just a whiny child.  I don’t know.  Now we go to this awesome place with beautiful views and wide rows.  The kids plop down and eat pick berries into their pint containers, occasionally dumping them into my big tray.

strawberry eve

Eve samples the goods.

strawberry lex

Nice wide rows, perfect for little ones to sit down while picking.

pretty

I love this place!

cherries

They had cherry trees too! They are sour cherries, but I thought we should pick some and I’d make a pie. Then we got there and the trees are covered in sticky juice, the bees are everywhere, and I remembered that cherries have pits and it would take a long time to make a pie… so we scrapped it and headed for donuts instead!

The picking goes pretty quickly so we’re usually done in a half hour or so.  I have trouble leaving the field because I always see just one more red berry, but the kids dragged me away, eager to get to the petting zoo and the homemade cider donuts!

donuts

Yummy! Fresh cider donuts!

Of course we need to visit the petting zoo too!  Lots of goats and birds and chickens this year.  The bunnies were in cages, which made Eve sad.  The pigs were pooping and therefore not fun to watch and the sheep was in hiding somewhere.  The goats are always the funnest part anyway, in my opinion. :)

goats and toes

This confused kid thought my toes were strawberries and kept trying to nibble them. :)

goats

Hello goats!

birds

Lex really enjoyed being in the bird cage this year. There were pigeons flying around the top, circling around and around, and I thought the whole thing was scary, but he spent a lot of time in there. They both love the peacocks. There are several of them this year!

bunnies

We were sad that the bunnies weren’t out running around. Eve loves to pet them. Then we started looking a little closer in the cages and found lots and lots of babies! Each cage had a momma bunny and a litter of babies. Then we understood why they weren’t out running around.

feeding time.

This picture made me laugh. One white goat is working the food machine and the other is working the milk machine! :)

Back home…

berries

We got lots! It took me longer to wash and hull them than it did for us to pick them all!

pie soup

I made a strawberry rhubarb pie (soup) last night. It is delicious, despite the soupiness!

Today I made eleven jars of strawberry jam while the kids were in camp.  Since I was heating up the house and had all the canning supplies out, I decided to make pickled beets as well.  I had a bunch of them from our CSA and I don’t really like beets, so I decided to pickle them.   I also made “beet chips” like kale chips with beet greens, on recommendation from our CSA farmer.  They are way more work than they are worth, in my opinion.  Tomorrow all the remaining greens from the CSA are going into a big sauté pan!

 

Camp – Day 2

Lex came prepared for camp today!  Safari vest, bug catching box, butterfly net, and more!  I asked the councelor if that was ok and he said, “Sure!  No problem!”  We’ll see if it all comes back again this afternoon. :)

IMG_2252

 

Camp

The kiddos started their one week of summer camp today.  It’s a new place we haven’t gone before with a “GeoQuesting” theme, a cross between ValleyQuests and geocaching.  They had a blast.  They learned how to make a fire, they swam, they took two hikes, and a squirrel (or some other creature!) ate Lex’s lunch leftovers.  A good time was had by all. :)

happy campers

I was going to take a before and after pic, but I forgot the before, so you just get the after. Eve was still in her bathing suit and covered in dirt!

lex

The secret to getting healthy food in Lex is to wear him out, then give him a book and surround him by healthy things that he likes. He’ll mindlessly much for hours. :)

I wanted a nice “before” and “after” picture of them but I was feeling kind of emotional about leaving them and totally forgot the before picture.  Oh well.  They had fun and I survived without them… and by survived I mean got a TON of errands and things done!  I think we are all excited for four more days! :)

Employed

We are home now, back from two trips in a row.  I have a list of blog posts I want to write, and the kids are at camp next week so hopefully I’ll get them written. :)  I have a few minutes right now though, so I thought I’d start off with a quick one.

I got a job!  Yay!  I interviewed at a local Montessori school last Friday, then got an offer on the phone, while standing in the grocery store parking lot in Oneonta, and accepted.  I signed the papers when we got back in town.  I am super excited to be employed and no longer worrying about what my fall will bring.  However, I’ve had mixed emotions about the whole thing as well.  (Because that seems to be how I live my life, debating, second-guessing, and wondering.)

The position is an assistant teacher job, not a full teacher.  This is awesome because it means next year will be so much easier than this year was.  I’ll be home when the kids get home from school each day, no more daycare and long bus rides for them, and I won’t have any extra work to do in the evenings and weekends.  Teachers do a lot after school hours!  However, I’m also a little sad that so much of what I learned and prepared for this year will be irrelevant next year.  All the lesson planning, differentiation, classroom management, etc… maybe.  I don’t know a ton about the Montessori methodology so there may be more of that than I realize.  I will also be in someone else’s classroom, so again I’ll be following someone else’s expectations.  That was fine last year for my internships, but I was definitely having a lot of “in my classroom…” thoughts by the end of the year.  I guess I’ll have to put them on hold for awhile.  The pay is paltry and if I max out my retirement account (of which I have none at the moment) I will pretty much be bringing home nothing.  Sigh.  Good thing Alan is solidly employed!

I had this vision in my head of what it would feel like when I got a job.  I would start planning my classroom, going through the kids’ things here to see what I can bring in, studying up on the CCSS for that grade, learning the curriculum, etc.  Basically work, work, work – but everything I’ve been preparing for this past year.  Instead it will be none of that, but I’ll have a quiet summer and I’ll be home with the kids after school in the fall, which will be great based on the year we just had, and I’ll be in a beautiful classroom with super friendly colleagues.  And working with kids, which is why I started this whole thing!  When I focus on the positive I am super excited about this job!  They are sending me to a Montessori conference so I can learn the Montessori curriculum and methodology, and they lent me a few Montessori books, so I have some reading to do… just as soon as I finish the Divergent series, probably totally anti-Montessori!  :)

So that’s that. New job.  Known future.  Beautiful school.  Friendly people.  Awesome hours.  Happy family.  Life is good.