All about alpacas

It seems like most of our weeks and weekends this spring have been full of fiber.

Not the kind you eat, the kind that comes from these guys!

All About Alpacas unit study guide for homeschoolers and unschoolers

Ashar has been a member of our local 4-H alpaca club since last fall, and she’s been working in earnest with her particular project alpaca, Gia (who is nicely posing above), at least once a week if not more since March.

Fun alpaca fact: The position that Gia is in above is called cushing. That’s when the animal lays with its four legs beneath it. One friend of a friend at the show brought her alpaca not in a horse trailer, but in the back seat of her F-150 – he just cushed right down and had a good ride!

Fun not-an-alpaca fact: One of our cats, Mitts, also lays frequently in cush position. 

But back to our alpaca stories.

Two weeks ago, we spent the weekend helping out at PAOBA, the Pennsylvania Alpaca Owners’ and Breeders’ Association showcase, which was held in our town. Many of the 4-H kids were showing, but we decided to wait until Ashar had a bit more practice, so she won’t show until 4-H fair and county fair in the fall.

Alpaca registry info at PAOBA show

This is a look at the detailed breeding information that is kept on each animal. Alpacas are bred for their fiber (both color and texture), so the show was full of posters advertising “great rose-gray herdsires” and that sort of thing. 

It’s a whole new language to us, things like the “hand” of the fiber and the “conformation” of the animal, but we’re slowly catching on!

Ashar with Gia the alpaca

And here’s Ashar with Gia – we didn’t want to disturb her, so Ashar didn’t go in the pen, but that is, in fact, her again at left!

The following weekend was something very important in the life of an alpaca farmer – shearing time!

Fun alpaca fact: A full-grown alpaca might have a 10-pound fleece, and shearing it off is a job, as you can see below. 

Shearing an alpaca

It involves lots of people holding, some (non-painful) restraints, nail/hoof clipping, tooth checking, a big shaver, and a LOT of mess. I was zero help at shearing because I came from a different event and was wearing a dress blouse and sandals. This is not alpaca-farm attire. 

Ashar, meanwhile, tried to help as much as she could by gathering up scraps of fleece for disposal, calming down alpacas waiting to be shorn, and running errands, but mostly we got to just watch!

The absolute best part came the week after that, however. We got to one of the two farms at which we work and meet, and guess what we saw?

Alpaca crias

A new little girl was born just a day before we arrived!

Fun alpaca facts: A baby alpaca is called a cria. We learned a bunch about crias at our meeting, including some of the first things you do when one is born (take its temperature; take a blood sample; weigh it after it dries; put iodine on its umbilical cord stump; and so on) and what the expected behavior is at different ages. This cria weighed about 14.5 pounds, which is on the light side – 20 would be a good, solid weight. But, Beth, our farm owner, who you can see showing the baby’s not-quite-there-yet teeth at right, said this baby might have been a bit premature.

Not-fun alpaca pregnancy facts: An alpaca female is pregnant for something like 11.5 months! YUCK! Most have a single cria each time they give birth, but twins do occasionally happen.

We’re due back at our other farm this week for a good practice session with Gia. It helps that she’s been shorn, because now she won’t get so hot while working on the things we practice. (Though I think shorn alpacas look ridiculous. I’m sorry I didn’t get a photo of one to show you just how silly.)

Fun alpaca fact: The 4-H kids practice for different kinds of “showings” with their animals. The first, showmanship, is actually a judge of the shower – can the kids point out certain parts of the animal? Can they show the judge how they might display the animal’s teeth for checking? Can they answer questions about what color their animal is? (This is harder than you might think.) The next type, obstacle or agility, involves making a not-particularly-tractable alpaca do things like walk up a set of stairs, or stand with you while you open an umbrella, or back up into an area marked off on the ground. Finally, there is fiber judging, which is specifically a judge of the animal itself and the quality of its fleece.

A few more fun alpaca facts

Want to know more about these cool creatures? Here are a few pieces of information we’ve learned:

  • An alpaca is a camelid. Other camelids include camels (duh), llamas, vicuñas and guanacos.
  • Alpacas are native to South America, especially Peru.
  • There are two types of alpacas: Suri and Huacaya. Gia and all the animals we work with are  Huacaya. Suris have a different texture of fiber – the best explanation I have is, they look almost like they have dreadlocks, not a ‘fro. Is that terrible or what, but when you see one in full fleece, you can certainly tell!
  • Alpacas are herd animals, so you really can’t and shouldn’t keep just one. But you can raise as many as five on a single acre, and if we didn’t live in a silly suburban residential zone of our township, we could easily have one. Interestingly, many alpacas develop particular “friendships” and will make noise if they’re separated from their friend.
  • An adult alpaca might weigh between about 120 and 200 pounds. Bigger than 200 is Alpaca Diet Time!
  • Alpacas eat primarily grass and hay, and in fact, some of the ones from our local farms are used by a nearby farm market in their solar panel field as “grass-mowers!” 
  • An alpaca is like a cow in that it has a multi-chambered stomach and chews a cud. This helps it get the most nutrition possible even when the foliage they’re eating isn’t particularly great.

Read more about alpacas

Just for fun, if you have an alpaca question, feel free to comment and ask. It’ll give Ashar and I something new to find out about!

10 little things that brighten my busiest days

One of the most fun things I did last year was to sum up some cool parts of our family’s life as part of the iHomeschool Network’s 10 * in * 10 series, where we shared some top-10 lists each week in the spring.

I’m thrilled to be taking part again this year with some new topics and some changes in my own mindset and experiences to share!

This week, a bunch of us are talking about 10 little things that brighten our days.

I could probably list 1,000 of those if I had the time – but I decided today to focus on the 10 little things that come up on some of my busiest days, the ones where I’m juggling multiple freelance jobs, being an engaged mom to Ashar, being a good wife to Chris, being a good daughter, keeping up with a large house, practicing tae kwon do and generally trying not to freak out.

Oh, wait, that’s all the days. 😉

1. Inbox zero

Inbox zero

This is not a little thing that makes my day. It’s a BIG thing that makes my day!

I am definitely a fan of inbox zero and getting rid of digital clutter. I generally operate with just a few things stacked up in each of my inboxes, but a really good day is one where I get to see the scene above.

No email in the inbox. It feels so good! (If you haven’t tried this, I highly recommend it, even if you just do it by dropping everything into a folder or label and working forward from there.)

2. Ashar at the computer beside me

On my busiest days of freelancing, I might be on the computer for 90% of my waking hours.

Ashar’s passion is gaming – Minecraft and Warcraft especially – and on the days where I can’t be as engaged as I truly want to be in her world, I still have the joy of being able to sit beside her, hear her conversations via Skype with her friends around the world, and be able to glance over and celebrate with her when she levels up a character or creates something new.

Even our “least connected” days are light-years ahead of the days when she went to school all day.

3. An empty sink

This very much comes from the FlyLady devotee in me. We have four people in our family, three of whom spend most of their time inside our house, and, yeah, the dishes can really pile up quick!

When I walk into the kitchen and see that the dirties are in the dishwasher instead of the sink, I want to do a big ol’ happy dance.

And even when the family has allowed Dish Chaos to ensue and I’m left to sort it out, it makes me feel good when I do get it back to shiny-sink status, for however brief of a time!

4. Cuddles and head-butts from my kitties

We have five cats. There really isn’t any day that isn’t made better by one of them rubbing against my leg, jumping on my lap or generally just being cute.

Also, when I get REALLY overwhelmed, I just find Mitts, our fat and furry polydactyl cat, and squeeze him like this:

That always works.

5. A balanced checkbook

Can you tell from many of the items on this list that I like things just so? I’m definitely that way about our finances.

When the checkbook is balanced, I’m happy. When it’s not, just ask Chris how quickly I “Hulk out.”

It just feels good to know that I have a handle on our finances. A balanced checkbook helps me feel confident in that.

6. Family dinnertime

In our house, it’s been a longtime thing that, for whoever is home, we generally eat together. It’s often but not always at the table, and while we almost always have a dinner planned, it’s not a requirement – if someone doesn’t like it, they’re welcome to have something else.

It’s not the food or the table that make it important. It’s our chance to all be doing something together. Sometimes it’s watching movies in the living room with takeout on our laps. But it’s most awesome when it involves all of us, because often Chris has to miss out because of work!

7. Bedtime reading

Reading at bedtime

I’ve mentioned before that there is very little we do on a given day that looks like what most people think of as school.

The funny thing is, the one thing we do without fail is probably also the most schoolish, though we don’t do it for that reason and, in fact, did it even before we started homeschooling!

We read aloud pretty much every night before bed, as a family. There are days where this is the only time all day I’m not doing some kind of “work,” either for pay or around the house, and it refreshes me in a way I can barely put into words. It can range from about 20 minutes to 2 hours, and it is the best way I can think of to finish a day.

8. Nice blog and Facebook comments

Everyone who comments here? You make my day. Reading kind words on Facebook makes my day. It’s just nice to know that the Internet can be a vehicle to drop a quick “hey, I’m thinking of you” or “thanks for sharing this” to a friend across the country or the world.

And, generally, when I get a kind comment, I try to make sure to go leave a kind comment for someone else as kind of a “pay it forward.” I like that!

9. Beating a level of Candy Crush

Beating a level of Candy CrushI admit that most of this list is fairly trivial stuff, but this one has to win the award for absolutely most pointless.

I feel good about myself when I win a Candy Crush level.

It’s like a whole big sense of accomplishment, as if I’ve actually performed some task of value.

I am only slightly ashamed to admit this.

C’mon, we all have our “mindless” fun, right?

10. My husband’s “just because” emails

I got very used to working in the same office as my husband for 50+ hours a week. Although we didn’t sit within sight of each other, it was neat to see him and catch a smile in passing in the lunchroom, or at the copier, or in a meeting. And even when I didn’t see him, it was comforting to know he was there.

It was hard to adjust to working from home in a lot of ways, not the least of which is that I don’t have my best friend here.

So when he sends me emails throughout the day, just links to neat articles I might want to read, or notes about our evening plans, or even “I love you” reminders, it feels like we’re working together again, and I love it!

We’re also linking up today to Top Ten Tuesday at Many Little Blessings. Whether you’re sharing your Top 10 questions people ask you, or a Top Ten list on any other topic, I’d love for you to link up and to check out the other blogs that have, too! 

And don’t forget to check out my previous Top Ten Tuesday posts, if you’ve missed them.

9 must-read books that changed my life

One of the most fun things I did last year was to sum up some cool parts of our family’s life as part of the iHomeschool Network’s 10 * in * 10 series, where we shared some top-10 lists each week in the spring.

I’m thrilled to be taking part again this year with some new topics and some changes in my own mindset and experiences to share!

This week, a bunch of us are talking about our favorite non-homeschooling books.

This was kind of a “gimme” for me – as I’ve written on one of my professional blogs about five books I consider life-changers – but it was a great chance to revisit and expand on the idea, and to show some of my eclectic favorites through the years.

10 books that changed my life

1. Peppermint by Dorothy Grider

Notice that this is the most beat-up book on the stack above (by far)? It’s also the oldest, and it’s one of the things I will probably never part with, despite its being held together by an all-over coating of clear mailing tape.

This is the first book I ever remember reading on my own (after many readings by my mom and dad, of course).

It’s about a sad, skinny kitten who doesn’t get adopted from the candy shop when the rest of his littermates do, but later finds the perfect home with a little girl who can’t afford to pay for a kitten.

If you want to wax philosophical, you might say that I like this book because I was also adopted, or because I was a skinny, homely little kid who really came into my own later in life.

Honestly? This book changed my life because once I could read, I could do just about anything I wanted.

If you ask me “what” I am, after wife and mother and daughter and friend comes one thing – writer. And for me, being a writer is tied inextricably to being a reader, which thanks to Peppermint I can proudly say I am.

2. Jonathan Livingston Seagull by Richard Bach

If Peppermint is the book that I credit with a love of reading, then Jonathan Livingston Seagull is its match in writing.

We were assigned this book in eighth-grade honors English. The teacher, a dynamo of a woman who I am proud to now call a friend, was tasked with the unenviable challenge of helping a bunch of awkward, sometimes cruel preteens and teens learn to function in a way that at least broadly resembled an adult manner.

She wanted more for us. She wanted us to soar. She had us reading all sorts of books – most around a single theme.

Be yourself, and be THE ABSOLUTE BEST at it.

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Her class sparked in me a love of writing – because I came to realize that wasn’t the plot of this book (or many others) that left me unable to put it down.

This book showed me the art of the written word – the storytelling and the subtlety that come when you don’t just retell events, you make something come alive.

For more than 13 years, I’ve made my living mostly through the written word.

That has enriched my world in more ways than I can count, and it humbles me, too, because most of what I write is fleeting – a newspaper article or column, a blog post, a piece of magazine prose.

But great writing – that sticks around. When I hear that my writing, however simple it might be, makes someone think a new thought, that changes my life too.

3. Sink Reflections by Marla Cilley, aka the Flylady

When Ashar was born, I was in my first full year of college and working a full-time job. My then-fiance and I lived with her in a small two-bedroom house we shared with my mother.

I was not doing a stellar job of keeping it all together. Thankfully, my grades were good, and I did well at work.

But to say the house was a disaster area would be kind. Once Ashar’s biological dad and I split up, I realized I needed to take action. This was not the life I wanted for my daughter.

Within two years, we’d sold and cleaned out a TON of crap, I’d graduated from college and I bought my first house, which Ashar and I moved into (with Mom in tow) in 2003; that wouldn’t have been possible if we hadn’t cleared out the previous one and gotten it ready to show.

I owe the ability to manage all of that to Sink Reflections and its author, The FlyLady. She’s got a system for getting rid of things that don’t enrich your life, and it starts by doing one thing at a time.

Her website – and this, her first book – showed me that if you build good habits, it’s a lot easier to keep things together.

The book is kind of about keeping your house uncluttered – but for me, it’s more about keeping your life from falling apart at the seams.

At the time in my life when I first read this book, that’s what I desperately needed – so much so that I led off with it when I shared my Ultimate Guide to Homeschooling as a Working Mom!

4. Tattoos on the Heart: The Power of Boundless Compassion by Gregory Boyle

So I’m a reader, a writer, a woman who cares about making a home for her family. But none of those labels describe my character as a person.

That’s what the next two books on the list are for.

It’s only been a couple of years since I first read Tattoos on the Heart.

This is a story of a Jesuit priest living and working among LA’s toughest gangs, and the stories of how the “homies” and “homegirls” changed his life as he was working to change theirs.

It was hard for me to include this book on the list – not because I don’t love it, and not because it didn’t profoundly affect me.

But it was hard to put my finger on this book’s tangible impact on my life. It’s a stunning collection of personal anecdotes, some that made me laugh and others that were heartbreaking.

But what I took from those can be summed up in one way. This book inspires me to look at every single person I meet as someone of great value.

That perspective changes everything. Instead of being frustrated when I have a problem with another person, I try to think about their value. That grouchy cashier is someone’s wife, mother, daughter, sister, friend. She means something to someone.

I’m no saint – and I definitely have a tendency to be easily annoyed. But instead of allowing that to make a tough situation worse, I’m trying to take a lesson from “Father Greg’s” book and treat people with respect. This book is a great read even if you are not particularly religious or spiritual, because that lesson applies to everyone.

5. 29 Gifts by Cami Walker

I first read it about a year ago – in fact, it was a public library selection that I liked enough to find and order, as was Tattoos on the Heart.

The premise to 29 Gifts is deceptively simple – the author, Cami Walker, was challenged by a spiritual mentor to give one gift every day for 29 days and to see what changes that brought in her life.

The book, though, is about much more than that. It’s told as Cami’s personal story – and framed through her serious health struggles with depression, multiple sclerosis and more. It’s about building up positive energy in yourself and in the world.

In my case, I believe that changing your perspective into one of abundance serves to make it clear to you how abundant your life really is.

Similarly, living in a perspective of lack – dwelling on what you don’t have instead of what you do – will only serve to give you the idea that your life is lacking in some way.

Cami’s book focuses on that – and on how her own mindset shifted. It also outlines how you can use the concept of giving to transform your own view.

I’ve personally taken the 29 Gifts challenge and have three complete “cycles,” or set of gifts, so far.  Not all my “gifts” are big – or tangible. Sometimes it’s as simple as being a listening ear for a friend, or taking my daughter for ice cream. Some, though, have been life-changing.

6. The Total Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey

One of my primary jobs for many years was as writer and editor for Man Vs. Debt, a personal-finance site.

The founders, Adam and Courtney Baker, had their own get-out-of-debt course, You Vs. Debt, which was hugely successful for me and which I went on to facilitate.

But before I found them, I was floundering. I knew we had “money issues,” but I just couldn’t seem to get out of the cycle of paying off some debt, running into an “emergency” of some sort, and running the debt back up.

That’s where The Total Money Makeover was such a huge help. While You Vs. Debt is the system that has gotten us out of $34,000 in debt so far (with more to go!), Dave Ramsey is who made me start to think differently about debt.

That’s when we started our emergency fund, and that action alone has had the most lasting financial benefit in our lives.

7. Ready Player One by Ernest Cline

Ready Player One is actually the newest book on my list – in fact, I just finished reading it about a week ago.

It’s also one of relatively few fiction selections to make the cut. But it’s that good if you, like me, grew up in the ’80s and are a technology-lover.

It’s not for everyone – there are some slightly off-color parts, for sure – but it is the sort of book I will read again and again, in part because it was just interesting, but in part because it paints a picture of what I truly believe our future on Earth will be like – both good and bad.

It describes a real-world America that’s depleted its natural resources and ruined its environment, and a matching virtual world where almost everyone goes to escape. The plot of the book, a search for some “keys” hidden by the creator of OASIS, that virtual world, is intriguing, but the story of our technological future is even more fascinating.

In a world where my daughter’s self-proclaimed best friend (who she’s never met in person) lives in Phoenix, Arizona, and where my blog reaches people in Korea, Alaska and beyond, the future predictions in Ready Player One seem pretty spot-on to me.

8. Moneyball by Michael Lewis

OK, don’t laugh, but I cried during Moneyball the book (and the accompanying movie).

If you’re not familiar, it’s a book about baseball statistics and how the Oakland A’s, under the direction of manager Billy Beane, used stats to do something unheard-of in the MLB – field a winning team based on all sorts of nontraditional ideas.

I’m not the hugest baseball fan, though I enjoy the game. (And of course I enjoy math.)

But I’m a huge, passionate, cry-tears-of-joy fan when I see someone have a truly new idea.

The birth of a thought – the creativity it entails, the absolute leap of faith to make it a reality – that just rocks my world.

9. The Hot Zone by Richard Preston

I don’t know if “life-changer” is a fair description for this book, but The Hot Zone certainly fueled a lifelong interest of mine when I read it in early high school.

This book documents the spread – and containment – of the lethal Ebola and Marburg viruses, which came from Africa and made an all-too-close home in Reston, Virginia.

Since I read it (multiple times), I’ve also read dozens of other medical close-call stories, both factual and fictionalized, and I was thisclose to going pre-med in college to pursue a career in epidemiology, the study of epidemics.

While the career choice didn’t materialize, it fascinates me to read about tiny viruses, and the awe-inspiring ways (good and bad) they affect humankind.

In fact, two of my upcoming Coursera online courses are in epidemiology – proving that learning really does come full-circle!

 

Our backyard wildlife-identifying adventures

One of the coolest parts about our family’s experience with 4-H, especially being part of our local Wildlife Watchers club, has been learning how to landscape to attract birds and butterflies.

Our “garden,” such as it is, is a work in progress, but it’s getting there. And we’ve got proof – a bunch of spring wildlife has arrived in recent weeks.

We’ve got a bunch of bunnies… squirrels… chipmunks… slugs… and plenty of robins. We do occasionally get hummingbirds, though we haven’t seen any so far this year, but we did spot this beautiful fellow for the first time in our yard last week.

American Goldfinch in Pennsylvania yard

He’s an American Goldfinch. Ashar was pretty sure that’s what type of bird it was – “some kind of goldfinch,” she said – but we pulled our our trustiest bird book (a 1970s copy of Birds of North America, almost a family heirloom!) to double-check, and then found she was very right!

American Goldfinch description in a bird book

Interestingly, one thing we watched this tiny bird do was jump on our dandelion stems, pushing them so that the puff at the top of the now-withering dandelion was more at his level before eating the dandelions.

Ashar said, “I wonder what he normally eats!” Well, enter the bird book, which tells us…

Description of what goldfinches eat from bird book

Dandelions are one of their favorite snacks! Reason #100 why I’m glad we, unlike most of our neighbors, haven’t hired a lawn service to get rid of them!

Luna moth on Pennsylvania house window

Our other visitor was a bit more uncommon – and a little more tragic. We came home from the state alpaca owners’ show (another 4-H involvement!) and I said, “Wait, what’s on our window?!”

A closer look showed THIS:

Close-up view of luna moth on Pennsylvania house window

Which, as it turns out (and after we investigated from inside as well and got a good close-up of the antennae)… is a luna moth!

Close-up view of luna moth on Pennsylvania house window

This identification, too, came from one of our many wildlife books, this time an Eyewitness Books guide to butterflies and moths. We actually have better “ID guides” for moths and butterflies, but Ashar found this one and I said, “Well, we can page through and see…” and lo and behold, here it was!

Luna moth information seen in Eyewitness Book

The one in the book is an Indian moon moth, but there are many variants of the moon moth or luna moth, Actias selene.

Description of luna moth from Eyewitness Book

After doing some extra reading online (thanks to a gentleman who breeds these from his home in Canada!), we realized that our moth was looking for a mate. She (we think) fought the good fight, but we may have caught her on the post-mating downcycle, which is pretty short.

It turns out that adult luna moths don’t even have a proboscis or mouth – no way to eat. They only live as adults for about a week, and they do so entirely subsisting on food from their caterpillar stage.

This moth held on to our window for quite a while, but it was a SUPER windy day, so eventually it fell to the ground, whereupon Chris and I, ridiculous nature-lovers, carefully scooped it up along with the mulch it was clinging to and helped it to a nearby lilac tree, where again it hung on through some ridiculous weather. We thought it flew away, and maybe it had – but later, Chris found it on the ground under the tree, bedraggled, wings torn, but still kicking!

So back on the tree we helped it get, and the next day, it appeared to be totally gone. We’re going to say it flew away, because… yeah. I got emotionally invested in a moth. (Moreso than Ashar, actually, though she certainly kept close tabs on it!)

I love having a home where we attract beautiful wild things! (Of the animal and human kind…)

10 "toys" that have lasted into Ashar’s teenage years

One of the most fun things I did last year was to sum up some cool parts of our family’s life as part of the iHomeschool Network’s 10 * in * 10 series, where we shared some top-10 lists each week in the spring.

I’m thrilled to be taking part again this year with some new topics and some changes in my own mindset and experiences to share!

This week, a bunch of us are talking about 10 toys that last in our homes.

Ashar’s now a teenager – so anything that’s lasted this long MUST be a winner!

10 toys that last into the teen years, including Melissa and Doug wooden blocks

1. Melissa & Doug 60-piece wood “blocks in a box” set

These blocks. Oh man.

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We bought them maybe 8 or 9 years ago because Ashar loves the feel of natural wood, and because she needed some larger blocks to build big structures.

She’s still loving them! She and Chris have built castles even in the last year with them.

This was definitely a case of knowing what we wanted before we purchased – something that was real wood and not cheap plastic or another imitation, something durable, something that was easy to store.

One of our friends actually suggested this Melissa & Doug 60-block set, and while I don’t remember who it was, I know I’m eternally grateful.

Super added bonus? One time, when Ashar was quite young, she drew all over them with pen. They’re natural wood – so I just sanded them and they were back to new! WIN.

2. LEGO bricks

10 toys that last into the teen years, including LEGO bricks

Lovely people from the LEGO company, if you are reading this, I would give just about anything to be part of your blogging team.

See, as it is, I write about Ashar’s LEGO collection, oh, I don’t know, all the time? So I’m clearly a big promoter!

OK, enough groveling. These probably made 90 percent of the lists in today’s linkup, but I can’t leave them out. Ashar has had LEGO sets since she was born, literally, since she inherited many of mine, and in turn, I’d inherited some of mine from my (8-years-older-than-me) nephew!

And, in cool both-sides-of-the-family history, she also gets to play with some of the LEGOs from Chris’s childhood every time we go visit his mom, who saved them in a shoebox for the grandkids to play with!

Minifigures are probably our biggest specific LEGO love. This is just a small sampling of Ashar’s collection; there are tons and tons more out where she’s playing with them!

They’ve worked out great, because we can act out almost anything. Reading Percy Jackson and the Olympians’ The Lightning Thief? Need a Minotaur? WE HAVE A MINOTAUR. Suddenly need to replicate Godzilla’s takeover of Japan? WE HAVE GODZILLA. It’s pretty cool. And maybe just a little scary.

3. Imaginarium 200-piece wood block set

10 toys that last into the teen years, including Imaginarium blocks

Yes, two sets of blocks on the list of a 13-year-old’s “toys.”

This Imaginarium 200-piece set is our smaller-sized companion to the set above, great for adding color and details – and building “homes” for smaller things! Right now, I don’t think Imaginarium, the maker, sells the 200-piece set we have, but there is a 150-piece one that’s close to the same size.

We love these for many of the same reasons we love the set above. They’re real wood, they spark a ton of creativity, and they’ve lasted for ages and ages; I think we bought this set maybe for Ashar’s 7th birthday! If you have even younger kids, the lid to their tub is a shape-sorter, so they can start to tell squares from triangles and so on.

Full disclosure, we STILL sometimes put them away through the shape sorter. So there.

4. Webkinz

10 toys that last into the teen years, including Webkinz

Ah, Webkinz. Ashar has something like 40 of these combination stuffed-animal-meets-online-game friends.

She knows all of their names, plays with them, sorts them (this bin is all dogs, cats and “regular” house pets; another is zoo animals; another is mythical creatures…) and generally has a great time with them in real life, but she also plays with them online, giving them fancy bedrooms and clothes thanks to the codes that come included with each stuffed animal.

I have to admit, I didn’t think these would be such a lingering interest, but Ashar was just scoping out a new addition in the grocery store last week!

5. Matchbox and Hot Wheels cars

10 toys that last into the teen years, including Hot Wheels and Matchbox cars

Ashar has a rather awe-inspiring collection of Matchbox and Hot Wheels toy cars that she plays with all the time.

In fact, this photo is from a display set up in our basement rec room right now – complete with handmade parking garage in the background. Ashar has “stories” made up for each of the cars, like how they’re in car school, how some like ice cream, how some are good leaders and more. And that’s not counting the fact that she knows what make and model each is “for real,” as well.

She has a VERY specific set of favorites. Her biggest joy comes from lining up the cars in the “right” order, with her favorites leading the line. (I’m also supposed to tell you that she likes Hot Wheels better than Matchbox, because there are “more options,” but she’s got plenty of both.)

Ashar even has two car-collector’s history guides – Matchbox Cars: The First 50 Years, and Hot Wheels Forty Years. She’s been through both cover-to-cover, and knows which of her cars appear where in each book.

While I didn’t put today’s list in any particular order, these might be the No. 1 favorite. It’s close between them and LEGOs!

6. American Girl dolls

10 toys that last into the teen years, including American Girl dolls

This probably marks Ashar’s “oldest” toy in a way – because one of her American Girl dolls is actually mine from when I was about 12 or 13 years old!

The best thing about these dolls has been their versatility. They’re keepsakes – so they’re “nice” material – but they’re also durable enough to be actually played with, not just sat on a shelf.

We also love the book series featuring each of the dolls – that’s been a neat springboard into history for Sarah. The neatest example was the one pictured above. That was from Ashar’s 11th birthday in 2011, when my mom, who grew up in the late 1930s and early 1940s and remembers World War II well, bought Ashar “Molly,” the American Girl doll who grows up during the same time.

Talk about bringing the stories home for Sarah!

7. Build-a-Bear, Build-A-Leopard, Build-a-Whatever

10 toys that last into the teen years, including Build-A-Bear toys

These are just a handful of Ashar’s Build-a-Bear collection. She’s been making these things for at least a decade; I think she got her first one right around when she turned 3.

We’ve done Build-a-Monkey, Build-a-Leopard, Build-a-Cat and Build-About-8-Dozen-Bears-Or-So-It-Seems. And they’ve all got outfits… and skateboards, or sunglasses, or hats…

But Ashar loves them! She still enjoys the experience of creating them, too; she just built Percy, at the far left, who’s an Amur Leopard, earlier this year! (If you care, also pictured are, from left after Percy, Nicky, Sammy, Lucky and Stripes.)

8. Dollhouses and miniatures

10 toys that last into the teen years, including dollhouses and miniatures

Ashar is the proud owner of two fairly large dollhouses.

The first, the one you see at left, was handmade for her by an “honorary grandma” – the mother of one of our longtime family friends who was Ashar’s babysitter through much of her early childhood.

It is truly one-of-a-kind – and it’s fascinating, from its tiny birds’ nests to its real-rock flagstone path to its tiny handmade curtains. This is something I hope Ashar will pass down to her own children one day!

The dollhouse at right is the “expansion home.” It’s from the Calico Critters series (it’s their “townhome”), and Ashar has not only the house, but several of the little Calico Critters animal families that live between the two homes.

I have to admit, I thought the Calico Critters stuff was a bit pricey when Ashar first asked for it – but it has been well worth the cost, as it’s really lasting-quality, plus lasting-interest-value!

9. Razor scooters

10 toys that last into the teen years, including Razor scooters

Ashar got her first Razor scooter in 2009 – which is when these photos are from.

She used that scooter hard! I mean, this became a major mode of transportation, probably much moreso than it was ever intended.

And this past Christmas, when Ashar was 12, she actually asked for a replacement for her much-loved but kind of beat-up Razor.

So now she owns a blue one (“for good”) and this red one as a spare, or for when friends come to visit.

10 toys that last into the teen years, including Razor scooters

10. Footballs, soccer balls, baseballs and more

I can’t finish off this list without including some of the approximately half-ton of sporting equipment that’s a fixture in our home.

We almost always have a football, a soccer ball, a tennis racket and a baseball bat, among many others. Lately, the soccer ball has been a big win, as has Ashar’s new basketball.

Her current “wish list” requests are a multi-purpose net, and a basketball hoop, both of which we’re diligently saving for but are a little out of reach right now.

That said, I FULLY expect both of those to be long-lasting favorites once we can finally spring for them!

We’re also linking up today to Top Ten Tuesday at Many Little Blessings. Whether you’re sharing your Top 10 questions people ask you, or a Top Ten list on any other topic, I’d love for you to link up and to check out the other blogs that have, too!

And don’t forget to check out my previous Top Ten Tuesday posts, if you’ve missed them.

The days that are anything but picture-perfect: When our unschooling is a hot mess

Imperfect homeschooling: Dirty stove knobs and all

Sometimes, homeschool blogging can make it look like our family – or any family – has it “all together.”

Pssh. Not so much.

So when I heard that my fellow iHomeschool Network bloggers were joining together today to share stories of our imperfect homeschool, I was definitely in!

This is a post that looks at the many days full of pajamas, arguments, glazed eyeballs and too much cat hair.

Welcome to our hot mess.

Here it is, unedited, unfiltered, unpretty – a collection of some of the head-smacking moments of our past couple years.

I’m sharing this in the hope that you’ll read it and see your own family in the way we see ours – NOT as a picture-perfect unattainable snapshot, but as a collection of imperfection all bound together with grace and each other into something more than the sum of its parts!

When the unschooling isn’t so hot

Ah, here’s one for you. In Pennsylvania, we are required to have a year-end meeting with an evaluator who decides if Ashar has made “sustained progress” throughout the year.

Ashar hates talking to people about herself, hates answering direct questions, and basically hates “weird” situations.

So for both of our evaluations, she has been almost silent the entire time (though thankfully speaking up JUST enough to get a “pass”), and at the recent one, she literally hid her whole body inside her hoodie and would not speak or show her face. She did manage to basically gnaw the zipper of her hoodie into oblivion, though.

Then there’s the part where Ashar (who is literal) tells the evaluator that she doesn’t know the last book she read because she doesn’t read books.

At which point I have to jump in and explain that we read as a family through read-alouds, and we all take turns reading (including Sarah), but that means that in her very literal sense, she did not read the book, WE did. ::headsmack::

The sad part is that since I feel like, as the legal supervisor of our home-education program, I’m the one on the spot if Ashar doesn’t reflect continued progress, these sorts of things tend to embarrass me, which leads to me getting grouchy, which makes things worse, until we’re ALL going home almost in tears or with stress headaches!

Guess you know we don’t have pictures of THOSE homeschool moments! 

When the house and its people are a wreck

What, you work from home, homeschool, and keep a great house? You’re either sleep-deprived or lying. 🙂

There are days almost every single week where I ask myself, “When was the last time Ashar took a shower? For that matter, when did I?”

There are PLENTY of days where I stay in my pajamas all day, no makeup, hair unbrushed. Ashar actually does a better job of getting dressed daily than I do.

And then there’s the natural casualty of living in a home with a large dog, five cats and a hamster.

Yes, I’m referring to our disgusting floors.

When I show photos of our home in posts, they often look like this:

Homeschoolers' dining room

What you CAN’T see in these photos are the corners, the tucked-away places, the hidden hairball zones. THOSE don’t look like the photo
above. They look more like this:

Imperfect homeschool: Dust bunnies and more

Then there’s my general forgetful nature. That means we have scenes like this:

Imperfect homeschool: Rotten bananas and forgotten pills

Yes, that banana should have left before it started drawing gnats. Yes, those are the antibiotics we were supposed to give the dog after his tooth-cleaning two weeks ago, which we remembered for about four days before slacking off. (And yet, there they still sit.)

My house, like my homeschool experience, is far from from perfect!

When the family is disconnected

Sometimes, the problem is really one of disconnection. These are the times when Ashar is SUPER-interested in learning something and we basically fall short as facilitators or coaches.

We went through a phase where Ashar was super-into everything space-related. Chris had ideas for dozens of things to watch and places to visit in keeping with that theme, and every evening, around 11 p.m., Ashar would ask if we could watch one of the movies we’d talked about, and that she was interested in.

By that point, we were tired. We didn’t feel like sitting through two hours of astronaut documentaries, so we’d put her off. And put her off. And put her off again.

She wanted to do a science experiment at 2 a.m. We put her off.

She wanted to go tour a local factory. I had to work on the tour’s only open day.

All of these things are bound to happen. But our worst days and weeks are the ones where we have more “misses” than connections. We’re roommates, but not a family. We ignore each other.

But there is so much good here!

We’re nothing close to perfect. But we’re trying. And I humbly submit that pajamas, hairballs and moldy food in the fridge, while certainly not super-wonderful, are not what we’re most concerned with.

We love each other. And that happens even when the bananas are rotten and we’re arguing and Ashar doesn’t know what 25 times 2 is.

Thank goodness! 🙂

10 things I’ve learned about myself in the past year and a half

One of the most fun things I did when we began homeschooling was to sum up the cool parts of our family’s life as part of the iHomeschool Network’s 10 * in * 10 series, where we shared some top-10 lists each week in the spring. The things I’ve learned about myself since that time are huge, so I’m thrilled to be taking part again this year with some new topics and some changes in my own mindset and experiences to share!

This week, a bunch of us are talking about 10 things we’ve learned about ourselves through homeschooling.

What, you mean moms learn, too? 😉

1. I’m not as much of a plan-aheader as I thought I was.

In my “former life” as a full-time office employee, I was the person who knew the plan for six weeks down the road. That’s pretty funny, in a newspaper office. I was definitely that way in my personal life, too; organized and fairly sure of what was coming.

The universe has a good sense of humor. It said, “OK, Joan, that’s cute and all, but let’s look at who’s really in control here, shall we?” Our homeschooling journey has been a huge exercise in me letting go of the need to plan; even our decision to pull Ashar out of public school midyear, which I talked about here, was essentially a decision made over the course of only a day or two.

And then, when we realized almost immediately that we weren’t going to be the “buy the big box o’ learnin’ books” family, complete with matching lesson planner, but rather we were going to do this unschool thing, I got to have another minor freakout. And again, the universe put things together so they were even better than they’d have been if I planned them.

2. I LIKE learning.

Something funny had happened to me before we started homeschooling. I was so tied up with the mess that was our life – the 50- to 60-hour workweeks, the four hours of homework we were helping Ashar with, the occupational therapy appointments, the counseling, the fighting – that I wasn’t really being me. I was just being that person who did those things.

I know that probably doesn’t make a ton of sense, but it comes down to this: There are things about me that make me who I am. And one of the biggest, the fact that I’ve always loved to learn (anything, for any reason) had gotten lost in the shuffle.

As part of my quest to be interested and be interesting, I want to model for Ashar that Mom learns, too. And I’m having a TON of fun rediscovering that passion of mine.

3. I’m a gregarious introvert.

New short, dark hair colorThroughout my entire life, I’ve been one of the rare people who has no problem with public speaking in the slightest. Give me an audience and I’ll give you a good time. (Does that sound wrong, or what?) I don’t need to prepare, I don’t use notes, I’m not nervous.

But I hate calling people on the phone. I get sick to my stomach when I’m stuck in a crowded room with a bunch of people I don’t know. When I’m tired, or sick, or unhappy, I just want to be left alone.

This never made sense to me. I loved being around people! (Except when I didn’t.) I loved talking and noise! (Except when I didn’t.)

But as I was talking to some friends, I realized that there is a valid personality type called the gregarious introvert – the person who is outgoing and comfortable with people, but who recharges best alone.

This isn’t so much directly related to homeschooling as it is to working from home, which I started at almost the same time we began homeschooling.

In a work sense, I definitely do better with some short, focused groupwork sessions, but then going it on my own for the rest of my time.

4. Working at home is hard work.

Ah, speaking of working from home: It’s hard. REALLY hard. There are a ton of distractions, and finding a balance between giving into the distractions and getting stuff done is a continual struggle. (Because, after all, if I wanted to lock myself in a private room all day, I could have stayed working in an office!)

And then there’s the fact that sometimes, people assume you’re not working. It’s taken Chris and I some time to get into a routine that doesn’t have me doing all the housework – because, after all, I’m home with it, so it tends to fall to me almost by proximity (more by my doing than his, too, I have to say in the spirit of honesty). We’re getting there, but it’s taken some time.

That said, I wouldn’t go back. For every time I throw my hands up at a loud movie in the background while I’m trying to take a call, there are five moments that I’d have missed if I wasn’t here. And I wouldn’t trade them.

5. I am not my job.

Ah. See, I was always that person who, when asked, “Tell me about yourself,” led with my career. Not because I loved it so much, but because it was what I spent the majority of my time and effort on.

That’s a priority problem, in my world. In my case, I truly believe that being Ashar’s parent is my highest calling. Doing stuff to make money is great – and can be a huge help to my family. But I’m not led to career-mindedness in the way that I always assumed I was, and in fact, I’m a lot more entrepreneurial and multi-skilled than any particular career would allow for!

That’s been a relief in a lot of ways – I always thought I was “doing it wrong” because I didn’t feel more dedicated or passionate about my job. Now I know that I’m passionate about what I should be, and good at lots of things that financially help the family out without taking away attention from what’s most important.

6. Massage therapy is amazeballs.

OK, this is kind of a silly one, but in the past year and a half, I’ve started getting regular massages, first to deal with some chronic pain issues and then simply to relax.

It has made a difference in my life that is hard to describe. I find I am more relaxed and pain-free, for sure, but I have become surprisingly more in tune with my own body. I know when something’s wrong – like the kidney infection I spent much of the winter battling – because I have a higher awareness of my physical state.

It’s also a great time to be quiet, to meditate, to doze, to shut off my mind – a time that’s just for me to be (almost) alone with my thoughts. Remember that introversion thing above? In a house with four people, five cats, a dog, a hamster and often various friends, it’s rare for me to be alone in a room with peaceful music playing. But for an hour every few weeks, I am! WELL worth the price.

7. “If momma ain’t happy, ain’t nobody happy” is more than just a saying.

My mood definitely has the power to affect my whole family. I’m the person that comes into the most contact with each other person, and I’m also pretty much the strongest or most assertive personality in our family.

And that means that when I’m in a bad mood, it is awfully contagious. And if I’m in a good mood, and practicing patience and grace, that is contagious too.

I know which I’d prefer!

8. I am DEFINITELY a night person.

Remember me saying we’re night-owl homeschoolers? Well, I’d pretty much always thought I wasn’t a morning person, but in the couple of years before we began homeschooling and I began working at home, I had almost convinced myself I could manage as one.

I have quickly learned that I’m at my best between about 7 and 11 p.m. If I have something that has to be done, that’s when I should do it. Even while working at home, I’ve tried juggling different schedules to accommodate freelance clients across the country and around the world, and no matter how hard I try, I’m not nearly as effective until later in the day!

9. I can accomplish a lot in a day.

This was one of my biggest concerns about making my income primarily from freelancing – the number of balls I’d have to juggle over a short period of time. (Though I have to admit, working at a daily newspaper certainly did prepare me for that to a large extent!)

I’m a big fan of list-making, and I find that I get a big sense of accomplishment at how much I can check off my list in a day.

From working on six or seven different websites to getting the dishes and laundry done to practicing tae kwon do to juggling orthodontist appointments, I occasionally feel like Superman, and it feels pretty cool. (Most of the time!)

10. It’s OK when I accomplish “nothing,” too.

The very best days in our family usually aren’t the ones with the list. They’re the days where we’re all together, free to do whatever, whenever. And I’m learning, every day, to stop worrying about the things I “should get done” and to think about the people I love and how I can be in the moment with them!

Learning (and having some serious fun) with MythBusters

If you haven’t figured it out by now, our “learning lifestyle” (and really, our overall lifestyle) is based around a variety of specific, passionate interests.

In the past year or so, Ashar has been fascinated by, to name a few things, robots, the Titanic, the Phantom of the Opera, cowboys and Indians, space travel, ancient history and mythology, alchemy, Minecraft and James Bond.

Her personality is such that she pursues these interests passionately. She doesn’t play a little bit of Minecraft or read a few things about mythology. She wants to spend ALL her time on it. And as I’ve said before, the best part about homeschooling for us has been working with these interests rather than fighting against them.

Such is the case with Ashar’s latest passion.

MythBusters.

We’ve picked up a free trial of Netflix streaming, and one thing I added to our queue, thinking Ashar might be interested in it (and I knew I certainly would be) was MythBusters.

I actually can’t believe how much Ashar has gotten into this show. She’s watched more than two dozen episodes in the past two weeks, and shows no signs of slowing down. (And I just told her tonight that the new season started this week; you’d have thought she won the lottery!)

Not only is Ashar having a great time watching Adam and Jamie, the show’s stars, blow stuff up – and come on, that’s a huge draw for me, too – she has learned an amazing amount. I think her physics knowledge now surpasses mine, though that’s not hard to do!

So far, she’s found out:

  • … about the famous Diet Coke and Mentos explosions, and the chemistry behind how they actually work.
  • … that spy cars that spill oil slicks or tacks behind them probably wouldn’t really stop their pursuers.
  • … that you can swim in syrup almost as fast as you can in water (and why!)
  • … how an escape from Alcatraz (made famous in a Clint Eastwood movie) could feasibly have happened.
  • … about 8,000 ways to escape – or not escape – from prisons in general, a piece of knowledge I actually hope will NEVER come in handy!
  • … how driving tired and driving while tipsy are similar – and how dangerous both are.
  • … that you might be able to escape a car flipped over underwater.
  • … that yawning really is contagious!
  • … and a whole bunch more.

I love it that we’re not afraid of “too much TV” in our house. We’d never have had this much fun or discovered this much (and that includes me, as I’m often watching with Sarah!) if we were working in opposition to her passion.

She’s not a TV junkie by any means, but I love that we can have marathons of the things she’s into!

What have you been watching – and learning from – lately?

iBlog: Or, all the things I wish I’d known when I started blogging

Starting this blog to document our family’s homeschooling journey was as natural to me as breathing. I’ve blogged since about 2001, and I kept a “computer journal” even before that, back in the mid-1990s. I’ve used more systems than I can name (remember Angelfire? Geocities? Lycos? You know, those things we had before WordPress and Blogger and Tumblr?)… and I’ve worked on sites that didn’t even have a system, just a bunch of pages in Notepad that I’d edit HTML in by hand.

Disclosure: I was not paid as a contributor to iBlog, but I do receive a percentage of the purchase price when anyone buys a copy using my trackable link. I am SUPER proud of the work everyone has done, though, so if you purchase using my link and you aren’t satisfied with iBlog, let me know personally and I’ll be glad to refund your FULL purchase price myself! I’m simply that sure you’ll love it.

The great part about learning over time has been just that – I’ve learned so much! In fact, much of my work is now helped greatly by the fact that I know HTML, CSS and Javascript, which came entirely through trial and error.

Lots of trial. Lots of error.

Lots and lots and LOTS of error.

In the world of blogging, there are now more resources available than ever before. Blogger, WordPress, and dozens of smaller platforms. Sites with legitimate stock image resources beyond that sad guy with the jackhammer that announced “under construction” on every 1990s website.

Then there are Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest… all great promotional tools, but all requiring their own set of best practices.

And don’t get me started on – gasp – making money online!

With all these resources, it’s hard to know where to start – or where to go next.

That’s why I’m super-thrilled to have teamed up with 29 fellow longtime bloggers to create a practical, easy-to-understand way to get started with your blog and/or take it to the next level. It’s all the things I wish I’d known when I started blogging!

iBlog: everything you need to know about blogging from 30 top bloggers

Our team has been hard at work on this guide for the past 3 or 4 months.

Our finished product, “iBlog: everything you need to know about blogging from 30 top bloggers,” is a 391-page, 38-chapter eBook that will walk you through envisioning, creating, growing, marketing and monetizing your blog, step by step.

We just released it for purchase at iBlogTheBook.com, and I’m hoping that you’ll consider $7.99 a more than worthwhile investment for what we’ve done!

What’s included in iBlog

All you need to create a strong vision and mindset

  • Building a Vision for Your Blog
  • Finding Your Niche
  • Using Your Blog as a Ministry

Practical ways to fit your blog into your life

  • Blog Planning and Organization
  • Streamlining Your Research
  • Marriage and Blogging
  • Balancing Motherhood and Blogging
  • Balancing Homeschooling and Blogging
  • Time Saving Blog Tips

Nuts-and-bolts guides anyone can understand

  • Designing and Starting Your Blog on WordPress
  • Designing and Starting Your Blog on Blogger
  • Disclosure and Privacy Policies
  • Basic SEO

Design and style help

  • Blog Design 101
  • Stock Image Tips (that’s my chapter!!)
  • Blog Photography 101

Best practices for social media

  • Using Facebook to Grow Your Blog
  • Facebook Parties
  • Facebook Hops
  • Using Twitter to Grow Your Blog
  • Using Pinterest to Grow Your Blog

Practical ways to grow and market your blog

  • Writing and Using an Elevator Pitch
  • Getting Your Blog Off the Ground
  • Building Your Brand
  • Building Community Through Your Blog
  • How to Get Subscribers
  • Guest Posting
  • Linkups, Hops, and Other Events
  • How to Create Your Own Printables
  • How to Write a Media Kit
  • Running a Group Blog
  • The Power of Attending a Blogging Conference

Revenue-producing tips that really work

  • Selling Your Own Products
  • Using Affiliate Marketing
  • How to Write a Product Review
  • Working as a Virtual Assistant

I admit, I’m pretty proud of this book – and I’ve learned several things myself while reading it! I’d love to know what you most struggle with about blogging in the comments below!

See the full iBlog table of contents and get your copy at iBlogTheBook.com!

A birthday celebration: Fleming. Ian Fleming.

Collection of James Bond books and moviesBond. James Bond.
Otto. Ashar Otto.

That’s been our house for the past few months, as Ashar has pursued a new interest in James Bond, as evidenced by the growing collection of books and movies you see here.

But of even more interest to me (because, you know, I’m a words person) is the life of Bond’s creator, Ian Fleming, whose birthday would have been this month. I’m joining some of the other iHomeschool Network bloggers for a celebration of some noted May birthdays, and Fleming was my top pick!

Unit study for homeschoolers about Ian Fleming, creator of James Bond and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang

All about Ian Fleming

If you ask Ashar about Ian Fleming, he can tell you what she considers the coolest fact about him: His middle name is Lancaster.

Disclosure: This post has some affiliate links. I only link to things we legitimately use and recommend, so if you see such a link, it's because we really do believe in the book or item!
That’s probably only going to make sense to you when you realize that our neighboring county to the east is… Lancaster County. We’d not to this point known anyone with that as a first or middle name, though, so that’s what stood out!

Fleming was born May 28, 1908, in London, England, and died Aug. 12, 1964. He was as much a renaissance man as his famous character, dabbling in all SORTS of things.

  • In college, Fleming was an excellent track-and-field athlete.
  • After quitting school while pursuing higher education, Fleming became a journalist for the Reuters news service.
  • He was known to be good at languages, including Russian.
  • He dabbled in banking and stockbrokering at the insistence of his family.
  • Fleming served in the British Naval Intelligence during World War II.
  • He worked for the London Times newspaper for many years.
  • And, like his character, Fleming was known as quite a ladies’ man (and a rather heavy drinker and smoker).

Another interesting tidbit: Fleming’s vacation home in Jamaica, where he wrote many of the the Bond novels? He had named it Goldeneye, which although iconic in the Bond film collection, was not ever a Bond book title!

All about James Bond

Fleming’s first Bond novel, Casino Royale, was completed in 1952 and published the next year. Between that time and Fleming’s death in 1964, he wrote 14 James Bond books, two of which were published posthumously.

So, why Bond? This video shows Ian Fleming on camera, talking about how the name for his hero came to be.

When Fleming died, he was only 56 years old and had only been able to see a handful of the movies made from his character and his stories. In fact, the latest James Bond actor, Daniel Craig, wasn’t even born until 1968!

Beyond Bond

I certainly didn’t know that Ian Fleming had done much of lingering renown beyond the James Bond series. Even my movie- and book-loving husband couldn’t come up with anything else.

But guess what I found out?

Fleming was also the creator of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, which he wrote as a children’s story for his son, Casper, shortly before his death! You can read more about that story on the official Ian Fleming website here.

Read more about Ian Fleming (and James Bond)

Many of the facts I’ve shared today came courtesy of a book Ashar bought just before her birthday: James Bond FAQ by Tom DeMichael.

This isn’t a kids’ book – it goes into detail about Fleming, as well as all the Bond movies, the Bond girls, the weapons and more. We think that the best thing to do is talk about issues like that, not ignore them, and it’s sparked some amazing discussions with Ashar, including his notes about things that kids and parents should know about Skyfall, his current favorite movie.

Meanwhile, if you want to read more, here are some websites that have helped us explore Fleming and Bond!

Ideas for discussion

If you think your kids would probably love the action of James Bond but you’re concerned about the more adult themes, like violence, sex and drinking, definitely consider pre-screening the movies (and the books!) in advance.

But don’t write them off – there are a ton of great topics for discussion from both Ian Fleming’s novels and the Bond movies.

We’ve had great conversations on many of the following:

  • Geographic locations. James Bond is a world traveler! With either the books or the movies or both, keeping a travel log and finding the places he visits on a globe or map, then learning more about them, is a great way to explore the world.
  • Time-period culture. Ashar has watched both some of the oldest Bond films, like Goldfinger, as well as the newest, Skyfall, and it’s fascinating to see how some things have become more acceptable, but others less. (And the clothes, cars and furniture make for interesting side conversations, too!)
  • Moral issues. Ashar gets that “real-life” good guys don’t go around doing certain things with a girl in every town. He’s also bright enough to pick up on the plot device that the girls provide – and we’ve even talked about the evolution of women in film! We’ve also talked about Bond’s drinking, and again, how that becomes a plot point in the stories.
  • Governmental regulation. In Skyfall especially, but as we’ve dug deeper, we’ve seen this in other movies and books too – the question of “What is the government’s role in our lives?” We’ve also been watching the Mission Impossible franchise, and the same question arises: Do we want the government to keep us safe? What is it OK – and not OK – for them to do? These have been some fascinating conversations!

Join the birthday party

If you’re interested, there are many more cool “May birthday” lessons from my fellow iHomeschool Network bloggers. Click the image below to check them out!

And thanks for stopping by to help me wish Ian Fleming a (posthumous) happy birthday in thanks for all the fun times he’s brought our family!

You can check out more posts in our Learning Party series here!

More great history resources

Unschool Rules: Part of the iHomeschool Network Massive Guide to Homeschooling HistoryThis post is part of the iHomeschool Network Massive Guide to Homeschooling History.

Make sure to check it out for tons of other great history resources, including links to a dozen more Unschool Rules posts!