Home School Life Journal From Preschool to High School

Home School Life Journal ........... Ceramics by Katie Bergenholtz
"Let us strive to make each moment beautiful."
Saint Francis DeSales

Showing posts with label Fall/Autumn Ideas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fall/Autumn Ideas. Show all posts

Fall Bucket List, 2015


  1. First Day of School Cones
  2. Decorate the house.
  3. Celebrate the autumnal equinox!
  4. Fall movie night with Charlie Brown's Thanksgiving.
  5. Celebrate Michaelmas (September 29).
  6. Celebrate Katie's 24rd birthday.
  7. Go letterboxing.
  8. Have a fall picnic.
  9. Begin deciding what costumes we will need for Halloween.
  10. Make a fall meal.
  11. Celebrate Oktoberfest
  12. Play in a huge pile of newly raked leaves
  13. Go on a retreat with my best friend.
  14. Go to a pumpkin patch.
  15. Go to a fall festival.
  16. Visit an apple orchard.
  17. Have a fall themed dinner for friends.
  18. Make caramel apples.
  19. Make a chili bar.
  20. Make pumpkin pancakes.
  21. Carve jack-o-lanterns.
  22. Drink warm apple cider on a chilly nature walk.
  23. Get and hang up bird feeders.
  24. Do a poppy art or craft for Remembrance Day (November 11).
  25. Have a Halloween party.
  26. Go trick or treating.
  27. Have a fall tea.
  28. Make soul cakes
  29. Make pumpkin cinnamon rolls.
  30. Celebrate my 54rd birthday.
  31. Have an outdoor photo session.
  32. Celebrate Martinmas (November 11).
  33. Put up Katie's bat house.
  34. Go on a hayride.
  35. Have a pre-Thanksgiving pie exchange with my homeschool group.
  36. Celebrate Thanksgiving.
  37. Make an advent calendar
  38. Make pumpkin spice soap
  39. Have a bonfire.
  40. Take a fall car ride.
  41. Go to a corn maze.
  42. Fall gardening.

My Fall Bucket List, 2014


  1. First Day of School Cones
  2. Celebrate the autumnal equinox!
  3. Celebrate Michaelmas
  4. Celebrate Katie's 23rd birthday.
  5. Collect acorns and decorate lanterns with them.
  6. Go letterboxing
  7. Begin deciding what costumes we will need for Halloween.
  8. Make mini fall leaf cookies
  9. Make a fall snack mix for co-op.
  10. Celebrate Oktoberfest
  11. Play in a huge pile of newly raked leaves.
  12. Make glycerin preserved leaves
  13. Go on a retreat with my best friend.
  14. Go to a pumpkin patch.
  15. Make chocolate skeleton and mummies cookies.
  16. Go to a fall festival.
  17. Visit an apple orchard.
  18. Make a candy corn cake
  19. Make candied apples.
  20. Make a chili bar.
  21. Make pumpkin pie dip.
  22. Roast pumpkin seeds.
  23. Make pumpkin pancakes.
  24. Carve jack-o-lanterns.
  25. Drink warm apple cider on a chilly nighttime nature walk.
  26. Get and hang up bird feeders.
  27. Do a poppy art or craft for Remembrance Day
  28. Have a Halloween party.
  29. Go trick or treating.
  30. Make soul cakes
  31. Make pumpkin cinnamon rolls.
  32. Celebrate my 53rd birthday.
  33. Have an outdoor photo session.
  34. Celebrate Martinmas
  35. Put up Katie's bat house.
  36. Press leaves.
  37. Go on a hayride.
  38. Have a pre-Thanksgiving pie exchange with my homeschool group.
  39. Celebrate Thanksgiving.
  40. Make an advent calendar
  41. Make pumpkin spice soap
For more fall-inspired ideas...
Follow Phyllis Bergenholtz's board My Fall Bucket List on Pinterest.

Fall Fun #3: Acorns for Teatime

Mugs of hot spiced cider and these acorn treats made a fine fall teatime. The acorns are easy to make using mini Nilla wafers, Hershey Kisses and butterscotch chips (although peanut butter might be better) cemented together by chocolate peanut butter (although regular peanut butter would work better color-wise.)  Now all you need to do is pull out some fall poems and a lovely afternoon unfolds.

source: Design Dazzle

Summer Fun # 60: Making Marbled Paper

This activity has been around awhile and I have been meaning to do it with the boys but I could never seem to find the appropriate time. Since I had put it on our Summer Bucket List, I thought that during our Not-Back-To-School week would be perfect.


Many blogs have posted about it, but most recently I remember seeing it on Having Fun at Home, where she has made a photo tutorial on how to make it.
You basically squirt shaving cream in a pan and then squirt paint on top. You then swirl the paint through the shaving cream to make a swirling pattern. Unfortunately we didn't have any tempera paint on hand (I had given it away for the big move that didn't happen) so we decided to try it with watercolor in tubes and liquid food coloring to see how they would work. The boys enjoyed the experimental aspect of the project.
Next you place a sheet of cardstock on the shaving cream/paint and press firmly. Then you take it up and swipe it away. It leaves the paint swirled on the cardstock.
This is how the food coloring turned out.
The colors were not very vibrant, but more pastel.

This is how the watercolor turned out.
The watercolor tended not to swirl well and it adhered to the paper only when we began wiping it away so that it made streaks rather than swirls.
We planned to get some tempera paint and try it again because it was a lot of fun to do.  The boys had a great time playing in the colored shaving cream once we were done with the project as well. I must tell you that this project is a bit messy and some of you may not be as foolhardy as I was to do it inside.
 We then took the marbled paper and traced it around leaves for a template...
 and made some late summer/early fall leaves...
green with just a tint of color.
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Thanksgiving Week Activity: Dipping Beeswax Candles


Making your own hand-dipped candles for Thanksgiving is a wonderful tradition. They can then be lit for Thanksgiving dinner, giving off a wonderful warm glow and slight honey scent.
To hand-dip candles, you will need to put your wax in an old can. Place this can in a pot of water and heat on a medium temperature until your wax has melted. Meanwhile tie two lengths of your wicking on a skewer, pencil or chopstick.

Dip this into your melted wax. Dip in for two seconds and out again for two seconds. If you leave it in the wax too long, your wax that is on the wick will melt back off.

After you have dipped the candle in the wax five times. it will be like a long string bean. Let it harden a bit in the air, and straighten your wick, if you need to, by pulling down on the bottom of the candle, while still holding the top with your other hand. Do this about every five dips.

This is what they look like after about twenty-five dips.

Now they are ready to leave hanging overnight to fully harden.

We hang ours in the kitchen, taping them to an open cabinet.
All ready for lighting at tomorrow's dinner.

Thanksgiving Week Activity: Naturally Dyed & Scented Playdohs

Cranberry Playdough at Almost Unschoolers
pumpkin pie scented playdough at Blisstree



naturally colored yellow playdough scented with essential oils at Syrendell
They all have a similar recipe, which is quite simple...
2 cups of flour

1 cup of salt
4 tablespoons of cream of tarter
2 cups of water

Cook, stirring constantly, in a medium pan, over low heat, until thick, and rubbery. Remove from the pan, and knead, as the dough cools, until smooth. Store in an airtight container.

Natural colors can be added by boiling something colorful in water so that the color is part of the water in the recipe. Just make sure it is cooled before you start. Or, you can add some spice or other dry ingredient that will color the dough, like 1/2-1 teaspoon turmeric for yellow. Scents can be added like essential oils, extracts or spices but they are best added at the end so the heat will not degrade the scents.

Handbook of Nature Study Lesson #184: Apples

James picking apples off our tree. (2008)
"The apple is a nutritious fruit, wholesome and easily digested. The varieties of apple differ in shape, color, size, color, texture and flavor. A perfect apple has no bruise upon it and no wormholes in it."
-Handbook of Nature Study, page 669


We are fortunate enough to have an apple tree in our backyard, so our study of the apple and its tree began in 2008 with picking the apples off the tree. We looked at the apple's shape and determined that it was neither round, nor egg-shaped, but something in between; a little heart-shaped, but not exactly. Then we looked at it's color. We talked about how some apples are red, some yellow and some are green. Our apples are an interesting blend of all three colors with lots of streaks and freckles, and we talked about how that probably meant that the tree had been a graft of more than one tree to create this blend. The stem is long and woody. and the depression when the stem grow is deep.
Alex picking apples in the backyard. (2008)
We looked at the bottom of the apple and noted that you could see five "scales." We had studied the Rose family and learned that the Apple tree is in the Rose family and that the fruit from these plants form beneath the flowers. The five pointed star at the base of these fruits is formed by the sepals that used to be around the blossom.
We cut open the apples and noted that the carpels, or the cells that hold the seeds (5, of course) form a 5-pointed star when cut across in half. When cut along the core, the carpels remain in tact and you can see that the case is smooth and shiny and that they each hold the seeds pointing toward the stem. The whole system is so precisely organized and consistent.
We took our cut apples and dipped them in white paint and printed them on various apple-colored papers.
It is amazing that you can see something like an apple a million times in your life and never notice these details until you really look at them.
I had never noticed before myself that the flesh part of the inner apple has a division between the inner core and the outer core. The inner core is "marked off from the rest of the pulp by the core lines, fain in some varieties but distinct in others." You really can see these lines that surround the core of the apple and branch out vertically to divide the apple into two parts. These lines almost look like twinkle lines around the inner star. It is amazing that you can see something like an apple a million times in your life and never notice these details until you really look at them. We decided to make apple prints to put in their nature notebooks. We took our cut apples and dipped them in white paint and printed them on various apple-colored papers. We will let these dry, cut them out and add the various parts of the apple later on in the week, using real seeds and markers.


The Apple Orchard Tradition, 2010
Going to the orchard to pick apples has been a bit of a traditon in our house even though we have an apple tree in the backyard. There is something very festive about it. I remember the first time we went. It was one of Katie's first activities when we started homeschooling. Alex was still a baby in the stroller. The orchard had just gotten in Fuji apples and we tried them for the first time. Oh, they were so good! This year we went to an orchard very close to home.
Katie at apple orchard. (2010)
Picking apples 2010
Apple Orchard, 2010
We decided this year to revisit the apple for nature study and that we would compare and contrast different types of apples this time.



I cut a Golden Delicious, Gala, Honeycrisp and Winesap apple in half, left half on the plate so they could compare the outside look of the apple, and cut the other apple into quarters so they each could try a piece of each apple.




We compared them inside and out, their scent, their shape, their color, and of course, their taste. I tried to get them to use as descriptive words as possible and I asked them to rank them according to how much they liked them

.
We discussed how color, texture and taste could affect their desireability.




And then, I invited them to make pastel pictures of the apple of their choice.







We used this wonderful pastel tutorial to help guide us through it.


Quentin's, age 6

James', age 9



Alex, age 16

Katie's, age 19


These will be added to their nature journals.


The First Day of Autumn




Signs that Autumn is here...
fill our day.
And we celebrate them.
We make candy corn out of Unifix cubes...

And when night falls...

we seek out and find the Harvest Moon.