Growing Gardens Wrap-up: Part 1

So we’re playing catch-up, after losing some momentum from the Memorial Holiday Weekend. To try to keep us on track for June (and because I’m pretty eager to jump into June’s theme,  ABC House), I decided to try to pick out my favorite activities from Week 4’s lesson plans. What resulted was a pretty fun couple of days with lots of variety, and a lot of inadvertent learning opportunities!

Since Week 4 was all about produce, we started out on Day 19’s Stone Soup Activity (which I called Vegetable Soup) and started reviewing all the vegetables we would cover. I had previously laid out the  Daily Sheets for Week 4, so we identified the different vegetables for each day and then started adding our veggies to our pots.

I had pre-cut Peter’s, so he went right into pasting them into his pot.

Peter was not interested at all in adding the dried pasta and peas to his pot, calling it a “mess.” He then proceeded to start sorting the letters & numbers from the peas. (Wanna make any predictions on his personality type?)

So while Peter was busy sorting, Nat finished cutting out her veggies (she’s very precise), and got right into pasting hers.

Since Natalie took a little bit longer cutting, I read the story off of the back of Peter’s pot when he finished, and we discussed how the main character was quite sneaky in his attempt to make stone soup and convincing the towns people to contribute their veggies.

When Natalie was ready to add some of the dried pasta to her pot, Peter was not ready to share and had a little meltdown. So he spent a little bit of time in his room to calm down (not pictured). 🙂

While Peter was having some alone time, Natalie and I worked on the Rabbit Is Hungry activity from Day 18 (Topic: Bean).  We read the bilingual cards, and then picked out the appropriate pictures that were provided to paste to each page that described what was happening. Unfortunately I forgot to get a picture of our cute little book, which is missing at the moment (such is life with littles). But it was a really fun activity and I loved the idea of introducing the Spanish terms as we were discussing. We enjoy talking about how big and diverse God’s creation is, and we’ve talked before about how the little boy, Diego, that we currently sponsor through Compassion International speaks Spanish. So it’s neat to be able to introduce more of his culture to her, and will hopefully be a connecting point for them as she grows up and begins to write her own letters to him.

Once we were done with our little book, we used the cards to play memory together. We took a quick break from this to watch a squirrel while he was enjoying a mid-morning nut snack.

By this point, Peter had quieted down and decided he was ready to join us again for Day 16’s Carrot Sewing Activity.

This was a little challenging for Peter’s dexterity, but he did fairly well with my assistance. Once we had the two carrots tied together, he enjoyed swinging the two carrots “open” and “close” for a while, so I let him free-play while I assisted Natalie with hers.

Once we had them all laced, we twirled the carrots.

Then I asked Natalie how she wanted to add the greenery to the end of her carrot (what shape & size she would choose), as well as how we could get it to stick to the carrot. Natalie promptly slide the green rectangle between the two carrots.

She then decided she wanted the greenery to be a triangle.

Once we got all set up, we twirl tested her carrot to see if it would stay intact.

Meanwhile Peter had lost interest and began sorting the rabbit counters.


He then surprised me in making rows by color, which he was mimicing from Natalie’s play a couple of weeks ago. So neat to see what he is learning by watching her!




He was so excited! “Bunnies, bunnies!”

And what really cracked me up was that he kept finding a few stray dried pasta pieces from earlier that morning, and would bring them up to me.
“Mommy, C, a C.” “Mommy, 7, 7!”

(Who knew just scattering alphabet and number pasta around your kitchen floor would become a opportunity for alphabet review? )

Back to the carrot design. Since we discussed her green triangle failed the twirl test, I gave Natalie the options of glue, paste, or tape, to hold it in place. Nat chose tape and wanted to put it on both sides of the triangle and re-insert it back in-between the carrot pieces.

Once her design was complete, we twirl tested it again to make sure it was successful.  The whole exercise was a spontaneous, fun exercise in design and engineering.

I then suggested we fly the carrots like kites.

We then finished up Day 16’s focus on Carrots by completing the carrot puzzle and playing with the eye chart that was included.

We discussed our recent doctor’s visit where she got her eyes checked, how carrots help us to see better, and so that must mean that rabbits can see really well since they love carrots.

Peter continued to play independently on the kitchen floor, now including the pom poms and a set of tongs, the ingredients for hours of successful independent toddler play .

We then moved on to Day 17’s Garden Domino cards.



We had just recently played dominoes with our Leapfrog domino set  that we had scored for free from a classroom that didn’t need them anymore, and so she was familiar with the idea of the game.   This was a  great independent activity for her, and gave me some time to assist Peter with the tongs and pompoms.

Once she was finished, we reviewed her patterns and made a few minor adjustments where needed. But overall she did really well!

(Natalie’s attempt)

(after we adjusted a few things)

By this time, Peter had wandered off down the hall to our bookcase that contains most of our puzzles and other shape blocks, and proceeded to continue sorting and stacking there. So I took advantage of his preoccupation to begin the Garden Postcard activity with Nat.

This girl LOVES to write, so she was pretty stoked about this activity. Since Peter is too young for this, I gave her both postcards and she decided she would send them to ‘people that she loved.’ She began designing while I wrote our address on another sheet of paper for her to copy later. This was such a fun writing exercise for her, where we could discuss the elements of an address (Name, House Number and Street Name, City & State), and how each part of the address was important for the mail person to know where to deliver the postcard. We joked that if we left out our House Number and Street Name, that the mail person would have to knock of every house in Hampton and ask “Are you the Harwoods?” She got a kick out of this and told me that would be pretty silly. And I am suspecting this will flow well into our study of places to live in ABC House, so yay for flow!

Natalie was a bit distracted with Peter and I coming in and out of the kitchen, and so this activity took longer than needed. Needless to say, she was asking me for a nap break by the end of it.

I took this as my cue to wrap things up, and put off the rest of the lesson plan for another day.

I’ll say that it’s a pretty different ballgame trying to do activities simultaneously with two littles. They keep me on my toes, but we’re slowing finding our groove. I’m learning when to flex the plan, but also when to persevere despite their resistance, still keeping my role as the parent and teacher. It seems like such a fine line between being flexible and letting them dictate what we do each day, right? As if what our day looks like is dependent on two moody toddlers.

I am thankful the Lord is showing me that He has given me the role of authority and that I have the ability and power to determine the temperature of our home. I get to set the pace, as I’m following Him, and I can ask Him for wisdom and strength and grace to make the decisions that need to be made each day. I will say that this has been key in feeling less chaotic each day.

As I have told my husband many a hard evening during bedtime routines, “We do not negotiate with terrorists.” And just like we have been learning, if we continue to parent out of consistent, graceful authority, our little ones  – our own little growing garden – will thrive.

MGT Blog AmbassadorAs an official Mother Goose Time Blog Ambassador,
I receive curriculum in exchange for posting about our honest and authentic experiences with the curriculum.
Click here for more information on Mother Goose Time.

Mother Goose Time: More Literacy

When my husband and I chose to go with Mother Goose Time for our summer curriculum, one of the main reasons was because of the awesome add-ons that are available to the main kit that seemed to really apply to the season of life we’re in currently. There is the Experiencing God devotion book & crafts that are so much fun. There is the Little Goose booklet that helps us bridge the gap between our little one (2) and the main curriculum, giving us some really fun developmentally appropriate activities for him, and then the More Math and More Literacy workbooks for Natalie to help her transition into Kindergarten & higher grade level skills. Each of these add-ons coordinate with the monthly theme, so it’s so easy to fit them all together and it doesn’t feel disjointed.

This particular day we were working in Natalie’s More Literacy workbook, encouraging her writing skills, as well as general literacy skills. One of the fun activities we’ve seen so far was an activity for her to practice finishing a sentence, and then drawing a picture to describe what she had just written.

“Under the leaves, we saw ______.”

Well, we have a lot of bees in our backyard. In fact, a few weeks ago, we had a swarm of them almost set-up camp in the tree in the middle of our yard. Thankfully they decided it wasn’t the most ideal place for their new hive and moved on after several hours of occupying our backyard. I’ve never seen anything like it. Bees everywhere.

Needless to say, the kids are still talking about it weeks later.

So under the leaves, we saw bees.

And then Natalie decided to draw two ‘helper’ bees and a queen, and explained that they were bringing her pollen so that she could go make some honey.
(She’s also become quite interested in the Maya the Bee show on Netflix, so this has definitely added to her inspiration.)

And the grand finale was adding our family to the mix.

It was fun to see her little train of thought and how she decided to complete the activity on her own. And it was nice to still have some one-on-one time with her since we have transitioned to doing school with Peter now. This gives us a time to connect together while she’s exploring her creativity.  I’m looking forward to getting into this more over the next several months.

MGT Blog Ambassador
As an official Mother Goose Time Blog Ambassador,
I receive curriculum in exchange for posting about our honest and authentic experiences with the curriculum.
Click here for more information on Mother Goose Time.

Moles, Crows, and Rabbits (Oh My!)

This week has been one of those weeks. You know, the kind where you have lesson plans for Tuesday, and you’re still trying to finish up those plans on Thursday? I blame the holiday weekend. You give me an inch of rest and I’ll take a mile.

Don’t get me wrong. I love a good family day, and especially celebrating meaningful holidays, like Memorial Day, where we can celebrate what amazing freedom we have here in the US.

But whew, it kills my productivity. Maybe we’ll get our groove back in June.

So, needless to say, the past few days have been an interesting mix of moles and crows and rabbits (oh my).  But fun nonetheless. So here are highlights from the past 3 days.

Our first day looking at Day 12’s focus on Crows, we decided to try out the Little Goose “Feed the Crows” activity. We pretended to be crows, using plastic spoons as our ‘beak’ and tried to pick up seeds (pom poms), sticks (pipecleaners), and rocks (pattern shape blocks) from one tray to the other.

(Don’t you love the mix-matched pjs? Just keeping it real, folks.)

Peter was so excited that he actually had one balanced on his spoon.

Natalie explained that she was ‘feeding her babies” and proceeded to make a yellow pipe cleaner worm to add to the mix.

This activity led to some great discussion with Natalie, my 4 yr old, about the difference in difficulty in trying to pick up and balance those objects from one tray to the next, and similarly there are things that crows can and cannot get with their beaks. We also talked about the really interesting fact that crows actually use sticks and other objects to dig & find food. I didn’t know that until this week. Gotta give crows more credit! That’s pretty clever.

After a little time with this, my youngest Peter (2) picked up two pipe cleaners and showed me a letter Y. One of the pipe cleaners was bent in such a way to resemble the letter, and I was really surprised to see that he was starting to recognize his letters out of abstract objects like this. It really goes to show the power of repetition with us focusing on Yy this month.  Yay for ‘y’!

AND he picked up two of the red trapezoid pattern blocks, put them together, and said “octagon.” (He’s been quite obsessed with octagons lately.) Although it wasn’t the correct polygon, I still love that he is starting to piece objects together to form new shapes and symbols. I never would have guessed he could do that at this age, which just goes to show much he is benefiting from watching his sister learn and play. So neat!

While Peter was playing as a crow, Natalie also spent a good amount of time designing scarecrows with the different picture options that were provided in Day 12’s supplies. I hadn’t looked ahead that far, so it was neat to see how what we had already talked about regarding scarecrows on Day 11 with Moles really flowed right into that day’s lesson. We then decided to play the “Feed the Crow” cards from the main Mother Goose Time packet for Day 12. This consisted of two pictures of crows (pictured below) and little food cards that you turned upside down. Taking turns flipping over cards, you ‘feed’ the crow each food item, trying to avoid flipping over a scarecrow card. If you flip a scarecrow, you lose. Natalie was NOT a fan of this idea at all, and so we opted to play memory with the pairs of cards instead.

She did surprisingly well considering there were 22 cards. We normally don’t play with that many at a time, so it was good to see that she’s up for more of a challenge.

All the while, the soundtrack for the morning was “caw caw.” Cute at first, and then I was pretty much over it. But at least they were having fun.

Fast forward to today, and we eventually got around to finishing our crows  that we had painted yesterday.
We spent some time feeding them seeds.


Although the wings ended up being more bat-like than crow, it gave me some great ideas for the future! So we’re learning to see the benefits of the less than ideal. 🙂

And then finally this morning we talked a good bit about rabbits.

IMG_20150528_104435547
We made our super-fun rabbit masks.
I tried to catch a good picture of Peter, but he is pretty much a rabbit. Can’t keep him still for long.

Isn’t he a sweet Peter Rabbit?!

Natalie put some effort into her rabbit’s ears. It’s been neat to see her artistic side developing.

And then we caught up on some journal activities.

Peter decided to add seeds to his sun’s eyes on the cover. Gotta love a little man with a glue stick, right?


Natalie, unlike my “R” example for Peter’s journal, wanted her rabbit to be sideways so she could add the nose to the side and show the tail. I LOVED that she thought outside the example and chose to do something different. This is not my natural tendency, and so it’s fun to encourage her in her own approach to things, and also to learn from her creativity as well. And of course, she named her Rabbit.

This is Sally.

And we wrapped things up by playing with the rabbit counters.


We used tp rolls for ‘burrows’, and Peter promptly started stuffing all of his in.


Natalie designed a little pattern bunny trail and then explained that she was going to put the little bunnies in the burrow first so that there would be room enough for all of the bunnies to fit. So she was strategically thinking out how to make sure they could all go home, possibly after watching Peter’s attempt at cramming them all in.

Little minds at work – so fun to watch!

MGT Blog AmbassadorAs an official Mother Goose Time Blog Ambassador,
I receive curriculum in exchange for posting about our honest and authentic experiences with the curriculum.