Documenting Everyday Learning with Project Life (Part 2)

I’ve been slowly making headway with our Everyday Learning scrapbook made with Project Life materials. I envision this journal as a casual record of our homeschooling projects. Something for us to look back on years from now, to remember the rhythm of our homeschooling days, and–hopefully–think of with fondness.

So far I’ve documented about when we released ladybugs into the garden and witnessed a solar eclipse

Documenting Homeschooling Activities with Project Life
Documenting Homeschooling Activities with Project Life
Documenting Homeschooling Activities with Project Life

played math games (cards, fractile magnets, and time telling activities)…

Documenting Homeschooling Activities with Project Life
Documenting Homeschooling Activities with Project Life

made art collage postcards inspired by the masters…

Documenting Homeschooling Activities with Project Life

explored the world through geography, using Puzzleballs, magnetic maps, and songs… (pages in progress)

Documenting Homeschooling Activities with Project Life
Documenting Homeschooling Activities with Project Life

learned about leaf shapes and classification and observed barn owls… (pages in progress)

Documenting Homeschooling Activities with Project Life
Documenting Homeschooling Activities with Project Life

and here we are getting started with more complicated math activities and observing the butterfly life cycle… (pages in progress)

Documenting Homeschooling Activities with Project Life
Documenting Homeschooling Activities with Project Life

As we continue through the year I will fill these pages and add many, many more. Stay tuned!

Everyday Learning | 02: Butterfly Life Cycle

I apologize about the lack of topic diversity on the blog right now. I’m very much focused on the school year starting and can’t seem to focus on much else these days (which, I suppose, is how it should be!). So here I go, bombarding you with homeschooling posts…

I’ve noticed the best homeschooling moments happen when you least expect it.

Earlier this week I stood on our front porch in my pajamas and shouted inside to my daughter, “Honey, come here right now!” (“Mom, I just need to finish this…”) “No, really, get out here RIGHT THIS MINUTE! You don’t want to miss this!” An ominous beginning, right?!

I witnessed the most amazing thing: cabbage white butterflies laying eggs on our tree kale.

Observing the Cabbage White Butterfly Life Cycle with Kids

The gardener in me watched in horror, while the homeschooling mama felt ELATED (!!!) because this is exactly what we’re starting the school year off with: studying the butterfly life cycle.

We witnessed first hand the laying of the eggs:

Observing the Cabbage White Butterfly Life Cycle with Kids
Observing the Cabbage White Butterfly Life Cycle with Kids

We spotted Cabbage White caterpillars of all different sizes crawling around, munching leaves:

Observing the Cabbage White Butterfly Life Cycle with Kids

Heck, we even brought a caterpillar inside to continue our observation just in case we might get to see him form a chrysalis.

Never mind that Painted Lady caterpillars are currently in the mail on route to us. We’ll get to see the whole thing again with a different butterfly species.

Observing the Cabbage White Butterfly Life Cycle with Kids

Now THIS is how we learn.

I’m so excited.

Everyday Learning | 01

I love sharing our homeschool activities here on the blog, albeit rather sporadically. With kindergarten “officially” starting later this month (!!!), I’m hoping to turn our updates into a more regular feature. Hence the fancy blog post title: Everyday Learning | 01. (Think that will help motivate me to post more regularly?! We shall see.)

In our house we call our homeschooling method “everyday learning,” a hodgepodge of unschooling, Montessori, and project-based learning styles, we try to transform regular activities throughout our day into learning experiences.

For example this past month we:

Weighed our CSA share to calculate how many pounds of vegetables we received (subtracting her weight from each measurement then adding up the various bags of produce; we received 24 lbs this week and 15 lbs the week before!):

Everyday Learning: weighing our CSA share

Created a histogram of Scrabble letters to see if we had the correct letter frequencies (we didn’t):

Everyday Learning: creating scrabble letter histograms

Dissected and pressed flowers gathered from a nature walk:

Everyday Learning: Dissecting flowers gathered from a nature walk
Everyday Learning: Dissecting flowers gathered from a nature walk

Copied birds using tracing paper and colored pencils cause she wants to create a museum similar to the one in the Boxcar Children series:

Everyday Learning: tracing bird drawings

Everyday learning = everyday fun.

The Mama Guide to Making Chubby Babies

This post is in honor of World Breastfeeding Week and part of Mothering’s “Blog about Breastfeeding” event.

The Mama Guide to Making Chubby Babies

Is there anything cuter than a chubby baby? I don’t think so. Here are my tips to fattening up your baby.

1. Breastfeed on Demand
In other words, BREASTFEED ALL THE TIME. Whenever they want it, they get it. Plus encourage snacking. Feeling sad? Have some milk. Thirsty after your nap? Take a sip. Bored and pulling my hair? Why don’t I distract you with this instead?

I can’t help myself. It’s lazy easy parenting.

The Mama Guide to Making Chubby Babies

2. Nurse Them While They’re Sleeping
Grab a good book (or your mobile), latch that baby on, let them fall asleep and nurse away. (Sleeping babies usually keep on sucking.) While you read (or Pin), your baby is getting that fatty hind milk. Eventually they’ll drop your nipple, or you can unlatch them, and in the meantime you’ve gotten thirty or forty minutes to read (or surf).

Plus your baby is looking bigger already.

3. Milk is Liquid Gold
If your baby is spitting up, try eliminating foods from your diet that might be upsetting their tummy. (I found that chocolate and dairy made my son fussy, burpy, and more likely to vomit. Our daughter spit up a ton before I cut out the usual culprits for a few months and she never spit up again. Really.)

You don’t want to waste any milk. You worked hard to make it and your baby needs those calories. ;)

The Mama Guide to Making Chubby Babies

4. Embrace Night Feedings
Try to sleep with your baby in such a way that you both can sleep while the baby eats. I sleep lying on my side, facing the baby, with my boob out and ready. Sleeping like this allowed both of our kids to settle into a routine from just a few weeks old whereby the don’t need to open their eyes or fully wake up at night. They learned that in their sleep they could reach out and usually smack me awake, I’d quickly latch them on, and then try to fall back asleep myself before I’d fully wake up. The sleeping baby would then continue to nurse in their sleep while I slept. (See point 2.) When babies get older they can even latch themselves on and then you can sleep through the whole thing, only waking occasionally to switch sides.

(I found taking magnesium before bed and exercising daily also help me fall back to sleep much more quickly. I try to go to sleep early too so I can take advantage of any longer stretches of sleep the baby might have. I don’t want to be downstairs doing the dishes when I could be sleeping four or five hours in a row. More sleep makes for a better mama. Either way, the baby is getting fatter.)

The Mama Guide to Making Chubby Babies

5. Stay Hydrated
I personally find staying well hydrated to be one of the biggest struggles while breastfeeding. I drink a tremendous amount of water, coconut water, and unsweetened herbal tea in an attempt to quench this constant and overwhelming thirst. At home I drink from a large mason jar with a reusable stainless steel straw. Out and about I bring my Klean Kanteen water bottle (with a BPA-free sport top) with me everywhere. I use my pee color as a guide to my hydration. If there’s any color to it, I need to drink more water to stay healthy, feel energized, and to keep that bountiful milk supply going.

The Mama Guide to Making Chubby Babies

6. Genetic Wild Card
I know there’s nothing you can do about this, but it helps if your breasts are bigger than your baby’s head. As much as I complain about my freakingly huge boobs, they hold a lot of milk. THANK YOU, GENETICS.

That being said, the more your baby breastfeeds, the more milk you’ll make. So latch that baby on, paruse my blog, and let them suck away.

Photos shown throughout this post are a mix of my daughter breastfeeding several years ago (see more in my breastfeeding retrospective post) and our son partaking right now. (Literally. He’s suckling as I write this post. Mama has to multitask these days and I’m trying to fatten him up.)