Life, Love & Literature

Just another Home Education blog

Boob day

I would have called it a day of cul­ture per­son­ally, but when you are a 10 year old boy the naked boobs are obvi­ously atten­tion grabbing.

We were head­ing up to Lon­don to watch Hor­ri­ble His­to­ries, but as we opted to grab a lift to the train sta­tion from Pete on his way to work we were in Lon­don nearly 3 hrs early.  So a bite to eat down on the South Bank and then over the bridge…

no I have no idea what Sam is doing…

to Trafal­gar Square…

Where we paused to recog­nise Nel­son and have a long dis­cus­sion about the logic of build­ing stat­ues and memo­ri­als to dead peo­ple, because after all they don’t know or care. Sam remains unconvinced..

and the National Gallery.

This is where we first started encoun­ter­ing naked boobs, lots of them.

Many moons ago when I was still liv­ing with my par­ents in Wales and Pete was in Lon­don, I used to go to the National nearly every other Fri­day after­noon, to pot­ter for an hour or so, then I’d walk along the Strand into the City to meet Pete from work before going for a few pints and a curry in the East End. Happy days!

Any­way I’d never taken the boys (apart from nip­ping in to use the toi­lets :-) ) as they are not inter­ested enough to jus­tify it as a day trip.   But it seemed a very good way to kill an hour.  We planned well, looked at the maps when we got in to the gallery, iden­ti­fied four or five rooms we wanted to visit, did those and left.  No one got bored, every­one stayed cheerful.

We went to see the Leonard Da Vinci they have as I’m hop­ing we can hitch our wagon to Big Mamma Frog and do our own Da Vinci project.  Although I sus­pect we may well get side­tracked by the Borgia’s a bit as this is Jack’s favourite HH song at the moment (I know we wouldn’t be the first to find our­selves led down this path so any sug­ges­tions of resources welcome).

We did Tit­ian, late 18th Cen­tury Britain, Impres­sion­ism (Monet’s Waterlilies in par­tic­u­lar), Seu­rat and Van Gogh.  Pretty ran­dom really, just what caught our imag­i­na­tion.  We stopped at things that caught our eyes as we walked though other gal­leries, mainly bat­tles, cru­ci­fix­ions and greek myths (with naked boobs!).

We stopped for a drink and snack at the back of the museum oppo­site the the­atre.  I love the going to the the­atre but have strangely never been to a show in Lon­don, so there I got to do some­thing new.

On the walk up to Trafal­gar Square we had an inter­est­ing dis­cus­sion on Geor­gian The­atre and how many the­atres were set up and named after Geor­gian actors. I also got to pass on the story I’d hap­pen to read on the train of Samuel Foote los­ing his foot in a rid­ing acci­dent that was the fault of George III’s brother, hence they gave him a license to set up his own the­atre which he called the The­atre Royale. Occa­sion­ally things like that work out and you get to sound very knowl­edge­able :-)

I won’t bore you with my thoughts on the show again as I blogged them sep­a­rately here.  The­atre was beau­ti­ful though, lovely domed ceil­ing cov­ered in naked ladies to Jack’s chagrin.

Rather than head straight home we decided to go and spend an hour in the British Museum  which appears to have replaced the Nat­ural His­tory as the default hang out.

We’ve been before so only did some of the Greek and Egypt galleries.

Parthenon Sculp­tures

But Sam was more inter­ested in the pat­terns on the floor :-)

Venus and her boobs

And some male bits to bal­ance it out

Egypt­ian boobs

and a scarab beetle

The mum­mies were their favourites

mummy

mummy and x-ray

 

 

 

 

 

 

With canopic jars run­ners up. Although we were dis­ap­point that the info plaques never told us the names of the four sons of Horus from whom the jars get their heads and the staff in the room didn’t know and looked quite dis­con­certed when Sam ran up and asked him.  Hapi the baboon (lungs), Imsety the human (liver), Dua­mutef the Jackel (stom­ach) and Qebehsenuef the hawk (intestines) if any­one cares. 

Canopic jars

But this was the highlight.

Rosetta stone!  Jack has wanted to see it since he read the first Kane Chron­i­cles.  Some­how we missed it last time we were at the museum.  I sus­pect because it was sur­rounded by tourists pho­tograph­ing it, took me ages to get this.

On the Kane Chron­i­cle theme the shabtis were also popular.

High­light for me was some­thing we nearly missed.  On the way out a sign caught my eye, fol­low­ing it we found…

…Olympic medals

  

We mean­dered back through Covent Gar­den where there were no naked boobs but there were lots (and I mean lots!) of flags.

And of course street entertainers.

   

And this would be where my cam­era started play­ing up and I missed the man doing a hand­stand on some bricks on the vault­ing horse.

To fin­ish off the Kane Chron­i­cles thing we stopped down on the Embank­ment to see Cleopatra’s Needle.

And have a run around in Vic­to­ria Gar­dens try­ing to catch pigeons to the amuse­ment of bystanders.

Before head­ing for home.

I love London!

For Sam, St Pauls is the one on the left, the Gherkin on the right (he gets them mixed up :-) )

A lovely day!

1 Comment »

Catching Up

Long time since I’ve posted prop­erly but we’ve been busy catch­ing up with friends. Includ­ing spend­ing some lovely days with Jack’s old­est friend and her fam­ily who emi­grated to the US four years ago but have been home for the summer.

We’ve been push­ing on with Jack’s work­books in an attempt to fin­ish off all the cur­rent ones before hol­i­day, ready to start anew when we get back in Sep.  We had fun look­ing at electricity.

Using sta­tic elec­tric­ity to make a tis­sue paper man stand up

mak­ing and test­ing circuits

 

Sam’s been work­ing more on his Egypt­ian project.

Mak­ing an Egypt­ian collar

 

And we’ve been buy­ing too many books :-)

Books, Glo­ri­ous Books

 

No Comments »

The Red Pyramid by Rick Riordan

pic of the front cover of book the Red Pyramid

The Red Pyra­mid by Rick Riordan

There are not that many books that I can read aloud to the boys and we all equally enjoy but this was one.
Per­fect bal­ance of action and adven­ture for Jack with­out being too scary for Sam.
One thing I liked is that the book never strays into realms of bad lan­guage or ‘adult themes’, which with Jack read­ing books which are often aimed at kids quite a bit older than him is a con­stant con­cern.
No it is not qual­ity lit­er­a­ture but it is a thump­ing good yarn and that is good enough for me.
Oh and it had Egypt­ian gods what more do you need. In fact it was very well researched and we all learned a lot about Ancient Egypt from it.

 

3 Comments »

Sofa Days

The last week I have been crip­pled with period pain and nau­sea. Ever since Sam has been born, about once a year I’ve had a really bad spell where the wave of cramp­ing pain from sim­ply stand­ing up can make me sick. First cou­ple of times scared the liv­ing day­lights of me as I thought they may have been mis­car­riages it was that bad. Doc­tors can’t find any rea­son so just some­thing I have to accept and be thank­ful it’s the excep­tion rather than the rule. Means though that the last week was vir­tu­ally a right off and we’ll prob­a­bly strug­gle for the next cou­ple too, as I tend to fol­low up with an emo­tional dip, when I really find it dif­fi­cult to be in the com­pany of other peo­ple. Bit of a bal­anc­ing act between boys need to socialise and my need to lock myself away.

Any­way we did man­age the usual maths and eng­lish bits.

Plus some science

Play­ing with gloop (corn­flour and water) 

Jack and Pete test­ing opti­mal dry­ing con­di­tions by leav­ing wet socks everywhere!

A water cycle in a jar. We put cling­film over a jar of warm water with a bag of ice on top. The idea was the water evap­o­rated and then con­densed on the cling­film before falling back down as ‘rain’. First two bits worked well, final stage took ages and wasn’t very dramatic.

We also did the old fool­ing the brain trick. Put one hand in cold water, one hand in hot. Then one at a time take the hand out and pop it in tepid water. With one hand the brain reg­is­ters the water as warm, the other as cold.

We also did some Egypt­ian crafts

pic of Sam the pharaoh

Sam the Pharaoh

Jack has been reread­ing all of the Harry Pot­ter books, so we have started catch­ing up on the films too and watched the first two this week.

We have also spent a lot of time curled up read­ing (bad Mum read until gone 11pm one night so we could fin­ish it as we all enjoyed it so much).

pic of the front cover of book the Red Pyramid

Egypt­ian gods on the loose — fantastic!

Oh and Jack came home with an abun­dance of Cub badges, so I’ve been sewing.

pic of Jacks's Cub badges

Jacks’s Cub badges

No Comments »

Catching up

Due to a com­bi­na­tion of Google being awk­ward, Vir­gin com­pletely crash­ing, hol­i­day and prepar­ing for hol­i­day it’s been a long time since I’ve updated.

Early part of month dis­ap­peared in a mist of more Egypt­ian stuff,


a trip to Portch­ester Cas­tle, where we had a play on the cas­tle and then joined some friends on the field nearby for Hannah’s birth­day picnic,


home ed group,
not for­get­ting ‘school’ work,
cubs, drama, play­ing with friends and chores
1 Comment »

All Change!

Has any­one else had prob­lems with Blog­ger lately? I haven’t been able to log in for a week — grr!
Nor­mal rou­tines seem to have pretty much gone to pot over the last cou­ple of weeks. Grandpa has been to stay and Pete had a week­end away. Jack is going through one of those spells when he has a lot of spark about him and we’re work­ing more or less autonomously.
We’ve been play­ing lots of table tennis.
Been out and about run­ning errands. I’ve had about 1/2 my hair chopped off and have new glasses on order.
There has been ice creams.

Buy­ing of ‘tat’ from char­ity shops (Jack is a Weep­ing Angel from Doc­tor Who).
Lots of time in libraries. Fri­day they spent an hour and a half in the local one read­ing and colour­ing while I changed the wall dis­play and Weds we spent an hour in the Dis­cov­ery Cen­tre in Gosport as it has a much bet­ter non-fic range col­lect­ing books on any­thing that caught our fancy.
We’ve been exper­i­ment­ing with plants.
Beanstalks again.

Which have sprouted already. When they are a bit big­ger we will turn one upside down to see what happens.

And cress. We’re test­ing what plants need to grow so have deprived some of light/heat/water etc.
We’ve been mak­ing things with salt dough.
2 egypt­ian plagues and car­touches wait­ing to be painted.

Baked cakes. Lemon and Straw­berry sher­bet cup­cakes to be exact.
Oh and we got a new piano!
They were so excited I got a rous­ing ren­di­tion of Ode to Joy, com­plete with ran­dom ger­man sound­ing words, at 8.30 this morn­ing while it was still in the box :)
No Comments »

Filling in the gaps

Aside from Camp­ing most of what we have been doing since Easter is stan­dard run of the mill work and play. We’ve had usual home ed group, drama, cubs and rain­bows (where boys get a cou­ple of hours play­ing with the other guider’s children).

While Jack was on camp I got out the elec­tric­ity set to keep Sam entertained.
And we made a heli­copter. The kit has stayed out for most of the week and we’ve had some fun play­ing with it.
Jack has car­ried on with his Maths and His­tory courses and started Book 2 of the Sci­ence and Eng­lish books.
The first chap­ter of Eng­lish looked at Snow White and a fac­tual piece based on snow. As
well as com­pre­hen­sion and gram­mar exer­cises he has done a num­ber of cre­ative writ­ing exer­cises inspired by the texts, such as this acros­tic poem.
Sam has begun work­ing through Schofield and Simms Men­tal Arith­metic book along­side the Key Maths.
Eng­lish, and Sam is work­ing through his read­ing scheme well. When we are out and about he is start­ing to sound out street signs and words he sees to him­self. Read­ing is com­ing on in leaps and bounds.
Also been con­tin­u­ing with work­sheets from his Devel­op­ing Lit­er­acy books

mixed up with some Schofield and Simms Writ­ing and Com­pre­hen­sion practice.

We are still look­ing at Ancient Egypt.
We’ve been read­ing about food.

Watch­ing dvds about Tutenkhamen, Cleopa­tra and Ram­ses the Great.

Play­ing games.
Dec­o­rat­ing masks (Baker Ross)

and sar­cophagi (Baker Ross again)

and mak­ing amulets (char­ity shop about 3 years ago)

Which I acci­den­tally burnt (they were red, yel­low and blue when they went in)

The boys have both had lit­tle fevery bugs which luck­ily we 24 hour things, so there was cuddling …

…and read­ing. Since we went to watch Mid­sum­mer Night’s Dream Jack has got in to read­ing the Shake­speare stories.

Poetry has always been a favourite.

We’ve read about and dis­cussed vot­ing sys­tems, and looked through all the elec­tion leaflets before going to vote.

We’ve built and painted Air­fix planes. Still have cock­pits and trans­fers to add.

Jack’s new book came, so he was happy.

We had a trip to Southamp­ton where I cheered up a poorly Sam (he was fine when we left the house …) with a trip to the Build a Bear Factory.

No Comments »