The Farm Report
  • Mandatory outside time

    Mandatory outside time

    The kids have not left the property since Friday. In fact, they really haven’t left the house since then.

    I had an all-day training session yesterday, so they had friends come over. Today, Tom had a meeting. I tried to convince the kids to go somewhere, but I couldn’t get anyone moving.

    Around 2pm I ordered everyone to put their coats and hats over their pajamas—we were going outside.

    For a long time we ended up in the pole barn, leaping over the wide gap between hay bales. Climbing on the tractor. Vitamin D quota for the day—check.

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  • Rainbow magic, indeed!

    Rainbow magic, indeed!

    Neko has been excruciatingly slow in learning to read.

    (Excruciating for me. It hasn’t bothered her one bit.)

    While the rest of the world was busy sounding out words, she would put in a few half-hearted attempts and then scurry off. When many of her peers were happily reading their first books, Neko could barely pick out basic words.

    I told myself not to worry. My mother told me not to worry. Neko’s teachers told me not to worry. I mostly didn’t worry, but then I would run into some kid her age with a 200 page book tucked under his arm, and I would fall into an unexpected landmine of worry.

    The thing is, I suspected she was perfectly capable. It’s just that, reading, so I hear, requires you to sit still. You can’t run and read. You can’t hang from the monkey bars and read (well, not efficiently). You can’t scamper from couch to trampoline to coffee table to trampoline to couch to trampoline run check on the chickens and then hit trampoline on your way back and read. I also think she lacks confidence in her abilities. She’s one of those kids who likes to be perfect at something from the get-go.

    So we’ve been biting our tongues and gently encouraging. We’ve been reading books aloud that challenge her cognitively. But we didn’t want to force the issue. More than anything, I want her to love to read, which is certainly not accomplished by flashcards and required reading.

    Around the New Year, I suggested she could stay up fifteen minutes later if she was reading. If not, off to bed at her ususal time. She decided if she could have a Rainbow Magic Fairy book from the library, she’d take us up on our deal.

    The Rainbow Magic Fairies make me roll my eyes a bit. A literary work of genius, they are not. There are about a zillion books in the series, so clearly quantity is outweighing quality. But a few days later I brought a few home.

    Day one she read about a page. Day two yielded maybe a bit more. But tonight something clicked. She started reading, and suddenly we realized she had made it through a whole chapter. So delighted with herself, she read another. By the end of that chapter, she could barely stay awake. But she was giddy with excitement, refusing to let me help her sound out words. She would have kept going, but bedtime had long since passed and neither of us could stop yawning.

    I’m trying to remind myself this enthusiasm will come and go. We might be back to one page tomorrow. But for tonight? We experienced some Rainbow Magic in these here parts.


  • Someone is enjoying the snow.

    Someone is enjoying the snow.

    The chickens, however, are not impressed.

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  • It will be 76° in Perth today

    It will be 76° in Perth today

    Just something to think about as a fresh blanket of snow hits the ground. How funny to imagine our Australian friends are likely frolicking in bathing suits today.


  • Press it seal it

    Press it seal it

    It starts innocently enough. You have a baby. Baby is cute. She learns to crawl and then walk. She goes to baby music class and then off to preschool. You might even think, “Maybe we should have another!”

    And then you find yourself with a child (or two) in elementary school, and suddenly you’re orchestrating a complicated schedule of skating lessons, playdates, school events and soccer games.

    Or you might find yourself up, say, in the middle of the night, completing a seemingly endless mailing for your school’s fundraiser. Envelope after envelope after envelope. Press it. Seal it. Repeat.

    I don’t begrudge any of these activities, it’s just that no one told me that there’s this whole part of parenting that’s so much like an office job.


  • Story time

    Story time

    Family time, dog, fireplace—very Norman Rockwell.


  • Things I love: Anthropologie fairy houses

    Things I love: Anthropologie fairy houses

    A few weeks back I was doing some shopping. I walked by the window of Anthropologie, and squealed. In full disclosure, since the moment I walked in their doors for the first time, I have loved their store staging. So many amazing ideas out of everyday things. (I wonder if someone has catalogued them all on the web somewhere? Wouldn’t that be exciting!)

    Anyway, with fairy houses being rather popular in our house, I especially adored this concept. I chatted up one of the salespeople and discovered that they are constructed out of cardboard boxes—cut, painted and rolled into tree trunks, and then painted again. Simple x-acto cuts create spaces for windows and doors, and snipped and glued balsa wood to craft ladders and frames. Voila! A veritable fairy village.

    As I was taking pictures, someone demanded to run back in the store and have her picture taken through the window. (Hint: it was not the salesperson.)

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  • Cooking

    Cooking

    Shep has been begging me to make peppermint ice cream. I think I might be raising a food snob—he had a taste of the store-bought kind, and declared it wasn’t good enough.

    Of course, one of the best parts of making peppermint ice cream is whacking the heck out of the candy. Shep and Ellery happily obliged, hammer in hand.


  • Dressed

    Dressed

    This girl. She slays me with her fashion sense.

    She’s insisted on keeping every summer sun dress in her closet, even when there’s a foot of snow on the ground. And by golly, she’s worn them every day. She’s layered shirts and tights and socks and shoes. Put on hats and necklaces and any accessory she could get her hands on. And that hair cutting incident? Another attempt to cultivate her look. (Let’s not make that mistake with a tattoo, my girl.)

    I admit, early on I was a bit dubious about all her pairings, but I gotta tell you. She throws together all these strange pieces, and then rocks it.

    I keep forgetting to document all these outfits, but today, in the middle of the mall, I made her stop so I could capture the look of the day.