Friday, April 30, 2010

Hopefully the closest we'll ever get to a rattlesnake...


We learned on the rattlesnake "safari" that rattlesnakes will not strike at you unless you move, especially move suddenly.  The only thing you can do if you get bit by a rattlesnake, if you don't have an extractor or stun gun on hand, is to get to medical help as soon as possible and put a tourniquet (thank goodness for spell check) around your arm, between your heart and the bite to slow down the venom getting to your heart.

 

Makes me wonder how many hats he has with snake bites and venom in them.  He said he could still wear it on his bald head, as long as it doesn't get into his bloodstream.  The tour guide had been hunting and dealing with rattlesnakes for about 40 years.



Can you see the rattlesnake in this picture?

We got a good nature lesson as well as a good history lesson of why there are so many rattlesnakes in this part of Oklahoma and why they do the Rattlesnake Round up every year in Mangum, which is about 20 minutes from where we are.  It has to do with the drought and dust bowl that happened around the time of the Great Depression, which caused farming families to leave their homestead's behind, including their storm shelters, basements, etc, which made a perfect settlement for mice and rats.  Where there is rattlesnake food, that is where rattlesnakes will go.
Now that there are people and farmers that live and explore this part of Oklahoma, the Roundup is to prevent unexpected meetings of snake and man, which can be deadly (sound familiar?).  It's also a fun time after rattlesnake hunting season (1 month in the spring) to have contests of who captured the longest rattlesnake and to learn more about rattlesnakes. 

During the Roundup weekend they also have carnival rides, food vendors, opportunity to get your picture taken with a rattlesnake, a rattlesnake pit, where there are men standing in the middle and answering questions (wearing rattlesnake-proof boots, hopefully also avoiding a "high striker"), as well as a flea market, where vendors sell lots of things, including items made out of rattlesnake.  Max was tempted to get a rattlesnake belt, but we didn't have enough cash.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Rattlesnake Roundup educational safari

Yes, that is Max holding a real rattlesnake (with a  snake grabber - not the technical term).

Princess Evie at 8 months!


Can you guess who did this to Evelyn?  As you can see, Evelyn was more than happy to be a princess prop for her big sister, Gloria.  These pictures don't look a lot like Evelyn on a normal day, but she was being particularly animated when dressed up as a princess...Uh oh...It will be VERY interesting having two princesses in the house!

Monday, April 26, 2010

Hay Up There!


This was from about a month ago when we collected hay as mulch for our garden, which is different from the time when we collected manure for our garden.  The hay was a lot lighter to shovel onto the trailer, but in both instances it was important to stay upwind.  Otherwise debris would get in your eyes or it could be a bit stinky.

We have wonderful neighbors around here who love to help each other when challenges, troubles, or projects come up, so we got permission from our neighbor to take the hay that his cows weren't eating anymore since they had peed on it.  This is the same neighbor who used his tractor to bring bucket loads of dirt for our garden, which is now doing very well despite windy days and barns dropping on them and such.

Anyway, we took the intact hay bales as a photo op.  I don't think we got any stunning family photos partly because JB was making faces half the time and Gloria wasn't her normal photogenic self since she got lots of sunscreen in her eyes and hair earlier that day.  Apparently she and JB were putting sunscreen on their eyelids because they were going to go sleep in the sun...that was their story anyway... Instead I had to torture them with eyewash spray as they lay on their back on a towel and I pried their eyes open and attempted to wash them out.  Gloria got the worst of it and as a result had puffy stingy eyes for the rest of the day and even fell asleep on the couch when I told her to go rest her eyes by closing them.

The kids had lots of fun climbing on the hay bales and we got good mulch for the strawberries and melon patch.

A New View Thru Twister Destruction

This mess is what Max found on his way back from work in the morning (he had been at PT early and was coming home to change) when he looked at our house from the road.  On the way out to work, seeing some debris along the way, he had been thinking about the unfortunate person who had their barn or utility building blown away, not realizing it was ours!  When Max mentioned that we did not have a barn anymore while I sleepily scooted around the kitchen in my robe making breakfast and waking up, I could hardly believe it because I had slept through the storm and a tornado!  Max had heard it, but did not realize it was our barn getting blown apart by a twister.  My first concern was the garden we had planted over by the barn.

God was really watching after us (and our little plants).  The barn is not too far from the kids' bedrooms, but thankfully only took out the barn and not the house.  The plants were not even injured because a wall twisted around and fell on it in such a way that it was more sheltering the plants than crushing them.  I think the plants are actually happier now because they don't have the shade from the barn on them for part of the day!

Thank you God for your protection!

Rewinding back to Easter...

Pictures from egg hunting in the back yard...

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

A day in the life of a crazy homeschool family...

Not really a typical Monday, but these things happen sometimes...usually not all in one morning!  Today was especially educational and exciting...

We've gone gang-busters on our vegetable and fruit garden this year.  With three acres, I think we probably have about 1/2 an acre of combined veggie/fruit garden area, not to mention the peach, pomegranate (in Oklahoma?!), fig, current, and apricot trees that we planted in both fall and spring over the past year.

We awoke this morning around 7am and I made sure to shut off the noises coming over baby monitor waves from the girls' room, and shut the master bedroom doors so that Max could sleep since he has a flight that will go into the wee hours of Tuesday morning.  Thankfully, that means we got him until about 2:30pm today before he had to go in and do paid work.

Today has been a beautiful day, starting out with overcast skies but still warm and breezy.  The kids and I made pancakes, which usually only happens on the weekend, but anytime Daddy is going to be with us in the morning is special, so we broke out the cast iron skillet.  While I was flipping pancakes, Gloria and JB went to "water" Biff (one of their morning chores now that we have a pet bull), now affectionately called "Lonesome Biff" (refer to picture on the right and/or the link above...if you are wondering).  The other day, Max, along with some help from friends and neighbors, drove Biff down Racetrack Road to the fenced area in front of our house, where he eats the grass and stares at us as we garden and do other crazy things, like 4-wheeler riding...and tipping.

After we ate breakfast, Evelyn was more than ready for her breakfast, which she generally gets on the couch in the side-lying position on my lap.  The kids wanted to learn UNO, so I explained it to them as they played on the coffee table.  To tell you the truth, I can't remember what Benaiah was doing at this point, but that might explain the pins stuck through the small plastic army man on the ironing board in the other room...it seems Ben Ben won...

The ironing board is low enough for benaiah to reach today because Gloria just got a new "Sew-Mini" sewing machine by Janome, which is perfect for Gloria to learn on (nice and slow!).  I put the ironing board low so that she could use her mini iron to eventually sew a "toy bag" for Evelyn on her mini sewing machine.  Gloria had finished her homeschooling early so I let her sew.  I ended up taking out a bunch of stitches though since I took a break from supervising her to change Evie's diaper.  She's back on track now though and doing very well for her first project.

Since Daddy was home this morning, he played marbles with JB and Ben Ben (Benaiah's preferred name these days), then did Bible Study with them, reading in a dramatic way the story of Benaiah (Kings and Chronicles in the Old Testament) and the lion in the pit as well as some stories about other really tough dudes of the Bible.  JB was fascinated the whole time, whereas Benaiah only listened when he heard "LION!" and "ROARRR!" and exciting words like that.  Otherwise Ben Ben was writhing and getting distracted (typical almost-three-year-old...he'll be three on Saturday!)

 Since JB was having fun with Daddy and listening to scary Bible stories, he didn't get his normal homeschooling done early this morning like Gloria did. I needed to stay in the house to help JB as he added two-digit numbers and carried ones (he actually didn't need help, but acted like he did) so I figured it would be a good time to supervise Gloria sewing since she had been begging to sew on her new machine.  She got the edges of the fabric sewn down after ironing them and that was about it for the baby toy bag this morning because I felt the urge to go out and garden especially since that was what Max was doing and it was a perfect morning for outdoor work.

Gloria's first creation on her new sewing machine...Evelyn's toy bag...

As we are trying to get the kids to understand that homeschooling work comes before fun play, indoors or outdoors, after a slow math morning I abandoned JB in the house to do his hand-writing.  I'm not sure what he was doing for about an hour in the house while I was making mounded rows for melons and squash seeds, but JB came out of the house with his handwriting book, not having done anything.  He ended up doing his handwriting, which also consisted of learning the different seasons, outside, as Max and I prepared the melon and squash patch for planting.

The other thing that happened today was that Benaiah rode Gloria's 4-wheeler all on his own for the first time after I thought he had just gone for a passenger ride.  *One can see the scheming look on his face in the photo to the right though...It was one of those times where I would've said "no" if Gloria had asked me if Benaiah could ride on his own, but all-of-a-sudden Benaiah came scooting around the corner driving the 4-wheeler with a huge smile on his face (and a bike helmet) with Gloria looking proud and saying "Look! Look at Benaiah!".  The over-protective parent in me (which does emerge occasionally) subsided. I just had to smile and go get the camera.  Ironically, I don't think I got a picture because I was so amused by just watching him.  I was amazed that at his age (almost three) he was so good at driving it...for his first time.  Now we definitely need a keep-Benaiah-on-the-property gate...otherwise we might someday see him driving down Racetrack Road on a mini 4-wheeler...not something I like to think about.

It was only 1 pm and along came another excitement.  Right when Max was about to get out the first aid kid for Benaiah's scrapes after having tipped the 4-wheeler over on himself a few times (it's a pretty light 4-wheeler), we heard a strange noise in the living room.  It sounded like someone madly typing on the keyboard one minute and bashing against the window the next (it couldn't have been me this time because I was in the kitchen).  Max checked it out and found a Swallow fluttering around the computer area apparently trying to get revenge on me for knocking down their nests a few weeks ago (that's what I get for leaving the front door open).  He was definitely threatening to poop on my keyboard.  Fortunately, he only managed to dirty the window sill.  Now I have swallow poo on both sides of the window!

Despite double-sided window poo, scraped knees and elbows from an adventurous little boy, and seam-ripping, days like today make me feel so blessed to be able to home school our kids on three acres in Oklahoma and blessed to have Max home this morning to share it!  Thank you for this season of our lives, Lord!

Thursday, April 08, 2010

Tractor Play

Sometimes I don't like JB's expressions in pictures because he's trying to be a goofball and can ruin the picture (especially if he does it in every picture in a series), but I think this one's funny bein' that he's in a tractor bucket...although it may not help his tough-guy image that his little sister and brother are both smiling.

Tuesday, April 06, 2010

Apparently Not a Daisy...

We may have acquired a pet bull (not Pit Bull, but pet bull)  ...or dinner for the next two years...

Max found a young bull wondering around without any collar, I mean, brand, or ear tags on it.  He got a neighbor to help him look for the owner and also worked with the Deputy Sheriff here in town to find the owner, but it appears that no one has claimed him yet because we still see him every day across the street in our down-the-country-road neighbor's pasture mingling with their cows.  He's kinda cute...he looks like an adolescent bull with two short horns and not nearly as big as some other, more mature bulls I've seen around here that have the wide faces and mean looks.

Today when the kids and I were on our way to Bible Study and then again on the way to swim lessons and soccer practice (Tuesdays are busy!), we slowed down when we passed him to say hi and talked about what we would name him.  In an effort to keep the kids from getting attached to him as a possible long-term pet I said we should name him "Beef" or "Beefy", JB suggested "Biff" (which kind of amused me because he's never seen "Back To The Future"), and Gloria in her innocence kept insisting on naming him "Horny".  I just remained silent on that one 'cause I didn't know how to explain to a 5-year-old why that name might be fitting, but not appropriate.

In our own yard, a tractor in which Benaiah got to ride (along with Gloria and JB)...Heaven on earth for this little boy...

                                    Tractors and airplanes...half of what this part of Oklahoma is all about!

In conclusion: Living in the countryside of Oklahoma sure has been fun, an adventure, educational, hard work, and rewarding getting to know our country neighbors, who are such a blessing.  They've set us up with cow pee- and-pooed-on cotton burrs for fertilizer, cow-peed hay for mulch, and tractor-bucket fulls of good Oklahoma dirt for our garden. For some reason, in Boston, where I grew up, this was not typical...


:0)

Monday, April 05, 2010

Just Shovel It!

We brought two trailer loads of cotton burrs that have been soaked with cow manure and pee.  This is great fertilizer for our garden.  These pictures are from about a month ago.  We already have our seeds sprouting in a mix of dirt and this stuff.  It's kind of strange that we are growing food in cow poop and pee, but it adds good nitrogen to the soil, which plants love, and I will make sure to wash everything we get from the garden!

I can relate to "The Pioneer Woman",  Ree Drummond, who calls herself "an accidental country girl", but is loving it.  Actually, my marriage to Max (which inevitably makes me "country") was not accidental but orchestrated by a sovereign God.

Saturday, April 03, 2010

Paws in the Air

Evelyn comes by this position honestly with her legs almost as short as her arms. Have you ever thought of the proportions of a baby? Not being able to reach over your head and touch your hands together and being able to hold your toes laying down with nearly straight legs? Not to mention being this chunky and this flexible at the same time... Max says "even her rolls have rolls".

Zephyr has no excuse, it's just unnatural for a dog...unless it's dead, which she's not...