It isn't the snow. The snow is fun.
It's the 50 mph wind that comes along with the snow. You have to dress up really warm, run outside, play for maybe two minutes tops, get the obligatory first bite of snow ...
and then run back inside.We looked for activities to keep us busy inside. Hannah wanted to do her sewing.
I did some of my own.
Gray played with his cars (natch) while Ains played her Little Mermaid game on the computer.Gray went down for his nap and we got out the finger paints. When I was putting the plastic on the table, Hannah asked if they could paint on the floor instead. With Gray not around, we went for it.
It took a turn I didn't expect - but should have.
How did I not expect that?
Or this?
All those colors together make brown. I expected *that*. Hannah wanted to add more colors and see if that changed the brown. It was an Experiment.
A Hands-On Experiment.
Or a 'Body-On' experiment.It's hard to carry a five year old under her arms up to the bathtub without her getting any paint on the walls. But I'm sure you expected that.
Clean-up was amazingly easy. Shower off.
After Gray woke up, and we'd fed our calves, we turned to games. Magical Creatures. In which the genie rode in a tractor. He'd kicked the satyr out.
Bambino Dino.Old Spider and the Fly.
Which led to singing about a certain Old Woman with a very bad diet.Then Connect Four and rediscovering Chess.
We made it through the Snow Day.


They loved it, of course, and Hannah took getting him to a safe place to live for the winter very seriously.
That didn't work out as well as they'd planned, so they settled for the next best thing - a brother. Who is Not A Prince, by the way.
Then they got distracted talking about Many Important Things.
Gray tried to understand, but he was getting bored, so he started looking for a way out.
The Queen noticed this and fed him a tea cake (graham cracker). He bit. (Heh.)
And then the talk got boring again. Look at the poor kid trying to keep his eyes open.
There they go ... drooping ...
He just wants a way out. "Maybe if I roll off the chair and onto the porch and keep rolling, they'll laugh so hard they won't offer me anything else and I can get away."
Which is what he did. Rolled all the way over to me and we got the well house swept out and ready for winter - can't have the well pipes freezing and breaking. That is what we commoners do while the royalty eats cake.
Then we went through our 'Creation Station' box (where anything still mildly useful for creative purposes goes to find a second life) and found little things to put in the bucket for him to dig out.
We arranged the items in groups by color, took pictures of them, printed the pictures out on cardstock, and stuck them with the bucket.
Obviously, Gray doesn't care too much about finding the objects on the cards (rice and beans are too much fun to dig in and, ahem, throw), so when he find objects, looks at them in a bemused fashion ("What is *that* doing in my bucket of rice and beans?") and hands them to his sisters, they squeal over which card they've finished.
(2 cup each flour and water, 1 cup salt, 2 tablespoons oil, 3 tsp cream of tartar. Cook over low heat until it forms a ball. Knead food coloring in.)
Big hit with the 'everything must be tested for ability to be airborne' set.
And with the bigger kids, too, who had it be everything from snakes to cake to lollipops.
One of these two suitcases holds old magazines - some given to me by my sister, some saved by me for years - and the other holds miscellaneous print materials. Old coloring books, books from thrift stores/library sales with gorgeous pictures but not so good story lines, old, fun playing cards, book slip covers (I don't keep slip covers on any kids books), calenders ... anything with interesting pictures but of no other use goes in there.
I tried to explain the finished product and then told them to cut out pictures that made them happy. Next time we do this, we'll use another theme - animals, colors, jobs, moods - so many possibilities, but for their first time doing this project, I wanted a no-pressure approach.
Ainsley had me read most of the books in the suitcase to her before she'd pick any pictures out.
Grayson played beside us.
When the girls had the pictures they wanted, we went upstairs to paste them on. Hannah learned how to plan a collage while Ains tried to eat paste. I told her that she shouldn't eat paste, even if it was homemade. We had had this discussion with the play dough too.
Then the girls worked at pasting their pictures on.
Today we tried out a homemade paste and it was perfect for a project like this. Equal amounts flour and water. A few teaspoons of alum for every 1/2 cup of flour that you use. Add a bit more flour if you need it stiffer, a bit more water if you need it runnier. We applied it with a paintbrush - my hands-on girls loved that.
The finished artwork on our art clips in the dining room.
Then yoga.
Dinner.
And these pictures of our favorite Halloween crafts.
And this - the most important thing. Do you remember my sister? She used to look like this.
Now she looks like this.
And there was much rejoicing. (And no small amount of baby lust.)




