Happy New Year 2025!

You’ll have to forgive the tardiness of our New Year’s greetings. I found it impossible to  reflect on 2024 in the midst of holiday preparations – including my new responsibilities as a kindergarten room parent – *while also* preparing the so-far-for-me-inevitable summer camp calendar spreadsheet. A good friend of mine recently reflected that these hectic elementary years may in fact be “the good old days,” and I’m doing my best to savor every “hug attack.”

For my 40th we took a two-week family vacation to Italy — my first return trip since I studied there 20 years ago. We rowed gondolas in Venice, hiked the Sentiero Azzurro Trail from Monterosso al Mare to Vernazza in Cinque Terre, roamed my old hilly stomping grounds in Perugia between incredible meals, and saw the Colloseum, Forum, and Vatican in Rome. Sasha (5) most enjoyed the gelato, Theo (7) loved playing in the ocean with our friends’ dog, and both remember feeding the stray cats. In filling out his summer reading acrostic, Theo used the first M of summer for “Missed a train,” but I insisted he use the second M for “Made a train” – since we technically did both. In an effort to put off bedtime, Sasha will sometimes pack a small rolling suitcase for her babies, gather them into her arms and run around with her bag and babies talking hurriedly into her toy phone about how she is going to miss her flight (or train), “oh no, oh no,” – no idea where she got that.

Dan and I continue to manage to squeeze in some work, and work travel, between ski weekends, relishing contact naps with our new nephew, school plays, fencing tournaments, and family visits  — including some to visit my 98-year old grandma in OKC.

Wishing you and yours a happy, safe and healthy 2025.

See more pictures from our 2024 adventures here.

Science Saturday: KiwiCo Explore Spain

I like to do various semi-education activities with my kids, most often on Saturdays. We call these Science Saturdays activities. I am going to post about some of the successful activities and the less-than-great semi-educational activities. Over a couple days we explored Spain, in fact we still have some activities left.

KiwiCo travel the world from your home explorers kits

We ended up getting this KiwiCo Explorer kit for free from a camp. It sat around for a while, which might be over their heads. When we finally got it out, both kids were drawn to building the boat, while Sasha was also very drawn to making the cubist art sculpture. I knew we had a hit on our hands from the initial interest.

Spanish Galleon

The kids were both really into making the boat. They eagerly helped and quickly pushed forward the building to completion. They thought it was fun and played with it a good amount after first completing it. The longevity of this as a toy is low, but they really enjoyed the process and had fun with it for longer than I would have guessed (like 15m).

rocking boat 😉

Cubist Sculpture

Sasha, who is more into art, was very drawn to this sculpture and painting project. She needed a little help setting up the sculpture, which her mom lovingly did. She then pained and added all the decorations. She was pleased and proud with the result, which now sits in her room.

This turned out to be more interesting than I would have guessed.

Other Projects

We still have a cooking project from the kit and some reading, but this kit was a hit. A small warning from other parents who do kits like this often. One parent mentioned having a subscription to these, and after a few, they began to dread another arriving as it felt like a chore vs a fun activity with the kids. I get that, and if I had to do a new country every month, I would burn out, but if your kids are interested in some country or you are preparing to visit somewhere, these are great ways to explore and discuss another culture together.

Science Saturday: Keva Catapult

I like to do various semi-education activities with my kids, most often on Saturdays. We call these Science Saturdays activities. I am going to post about some of the successful activities and the less-than-great semi-educational activities. In this case, we made a catapult.

Keva: Catapult

This was a kit to make a Catapult… It does make a Catapult, but it is hard and slow for kids to build… I ended up having to build most of the kit. While the kit said 8+, aligning the wood straight to make things work is pretty difficult for a single adult… let alone an adult trying to do this with children… Also, many of the steps require applying glue, which means you have to wait 10+ minutes between steps. The kids really didn’t have the patience for that. While the kid was good, it wasn’t as kid-driven as I like some of these activities to be.

Kid Approved? Yes

Yeah, the kids struggled to get into the building and wait for everything to dry. They thought it was pretty cool and enjoyed playing with it and asking questions. This will also have a longer replay value than many other kits or toys. We shot candy out of it to knock over toys, and you would get to eat the candy after hitting a target.